Programs/Content
Why focusing too much on digital could make stations lose their way
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“A strong app or polished social media presence won’t compensate for a lack of meaningful, locally relevant content.”
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/erin-lightfoot/page/80/)
“A strong app or polished social media presence won’t compensate for a lack of meaningful, locally relevant content.”
Senior Field Correspondent Nina Kravinsky, a former NPR producer, is reporting from the station’s news bureau in Hermosillo.
Jonathan Blakley stepped up from interim to permanent chief content officer for WYPR.
Some stations have also announced that they’re leaving the social media platform.
“The partnership … allows us to expand sponsorship categories to get more business,” says Gina Garrubbo, CEO of National Public Media.
The station’s board voted unanimously to promote Marshall.
Erika Dilday, who leads American Documentary, was named a co-director and co-producer for the upcoming “Emancipation to Exodus.”
The four-hour adaptation, which debuts on PBS April 30, honors the 1749 book yet shows it through a modern lens.
Reporting on public safety without thoughtful consideration can lead to diminished accuracy and lack of depth that may leave audiences with a biased perception of which issues are truly important to communities.
Today’s media environment requires us to engage with audiences in as many ways as possible with content that welcomes them to the music.
Fans of Carl Sagan will win the space race when it comes to solving this month’s crossword.
The class-action case examines PBS’ role in sharing digital subscribers’ personal data with Facebook.