Engagement
Why live events could be key to classical radio’s survival
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Growing classical audiences is about exposure and engagement. The best live events may attract both current and potential members.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/chris-ostertag/page/109/)
Growing classical audiences is about exposure and engagement. The best live events may attract both current and potential members.
The House Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency is concerned about “blatantly ideological and partisan coverage,” Greene wrote in letters to PBS’ Paula Kerger and NPR’s Katherine Maher.
“I think that the only way we do better is if we have accountability,” said Pallavi Gogoi, head of NPR’s business desk.
Barry Gisser joins APMG from the Science Museum of Minnesota.
The members say that raises and a stipend given to nonunion employees are among the issues at stake.
A NYPR spokesperson told Current that Justin Fairfax’s complaint “is completely without merit.”
A decision to rethink the format gave producers flexibility to create episodes on hotly debated, timely topics.
Liliana Maria Percy Ruiz most recently worked as head of production for Gimlet Media.
“We’re introducing people to our content who wouldn’t have experienced it any other way,” says Laura Durham of PBS Utah.
Two journalism collaboratives, the Gulf States Newsroom and Ohio Valley ReSource, are adding beat reporters who will follow the long-term fallout from the reversal of Roe v. Wade.
“It’s not about winning or being competitive, it’s really just connecting through food and our culture,” says Emily Wilderman of WNIN in Evansville, Ind.
The floods submerged the studio of community radio station WMMT and damaged its decades of media archives.