Programs/Content
Reporting series illuminates roles of Virginians who make democracy work
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A series of profiles from the Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism and WHRO takes inspiration from community journalism.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/greg-petrowich/page/103/)
A series of profiles from the Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism and WHRO takes inspiration from community journalism.
Stations have found that monetizing their local news sites takes experimentation and “a lot of learning.”
“There are no roads to here, so the only way you get in is by airplane or ship, or if you have a snow machine,” says Pierre Lonewolf, chief engineer of KOTZ in Kotzebue, Alaska.
Woodruff has been an anchor for the “PBS NewsHour” since 2011.
Antolini became interim executive director last year.
The station raised more than $26,000 to help equip its headquarters with bird-safety features.
Stel Kline, a transgender journalist who began hosting “Morning Edition” at SDPB last fall, was told they were “not objective” and had “a problem with authority.”
The two outlets will share content and plan to co-host events.
The endowment provided nearly $880,000 to public media organizations and other nonprofits that create or support media projects centered on the arts.
Under the proposed contract, KERA would take over management of 100-year-old WRR and convert it to a noncommercial license.
After a difficult March drive, stations look for ways to head off a “glide path downward.”
Liroff worked for GBH for nearly 30 years.