Programs/Content
Kentucky Public Radio’s recipe for a statewide voter guide success
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It takes some planning to create a voter guide that geolocates users, but the payoff is entirely worth it.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/daisy-contreras/page/481/)
It takes some planning to create a voter guide that geolocates users, but the payoff is entirely worth it.
We in public media often refer to our little world as “the system.” If we are, in fact, an interdependent system, fundraising to support fellow stations and staffers in distress is the kind of thing we can do to prove it.
A D.C. Superior Court judge denied NPR’s motion for summary judgment in a lawsuit alleging misrepresentation of job duties and failure to accommodate a disability.
PBS is moving ahead with plans to return most of its distribution to ground level via a new fiber-based system that promises more versatility.
The Public Media Platform is seeking stations to help test a new tool.
Funds will go toward hiring a new executive producer and supporting the podcast network’s independent producers.
Starting July 1, PBS will end its nearly decade-long affiliation with the MediaShift network of blogs.
As recently as a few months ago, the idea of a U.S. orchestra and pubcaster originating a live concert broadcast from Havana would have been unthinkable.
We want to make it easy for other stations to share local stories while strengthening community ties and developing stronger digital production techniques.
A conversation fabout the engagement activities, impact, and sustainability around the PBS special 180 Days: Hartsville.
The session aims to take the insights of a white paper on TV news and apply it to the world of public television, which has a unique role to play in the future of TV journalism.
In this session we’re aiming to explore a key question with the explosion of social and digital: How does a station “convert” its social media fans and followers into real-world connections?