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/justine-nagan/page/17/)
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.
The layoffs amount to a workforce reduction of 8.5% at the station, which faces a significant budget deficit.
A new membership program for Vermont Public’s “But Why” children’s podcast is bringing in new donors.
Before embracing Robert Putnam’s research on social capital, stations should look to more inclusive models for building civic engagement.
A Paragon webinar on “Join or Die” encouraged stations to become “better caretakers of their communities.”
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The donation will fund technology improvements and additional programs.
GBH appointed Nina Chaudry of “Frontline” to succeed him as EP.
On a recent episode of the podcast “Better News,” Amy Zielinski, senior event producer for Vermont Public, discussed her station’s live events strategy and what it learned from participating in a five-month event sprint.
Riley, who joined APTS in 2010, was the board’s unanimous choice to succeed retiring CEO Pat Butler.
KUT GM Debbie Hiott, among others, was elected to serve a three-year term on NPR’s board.