System/Policy
Why public media’s past might be its future
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To succeed in the world of on-demand media choices, public media organizations need to return their focus to creating original local content.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/lindsay-foster-thomas/page/169/)
To succeed in the world of on-demand media choices, public media organizations need to return their focus to creating original local content.
An audit into Arkansas PBS’ “procurements and related processes” continued to raise concerns from state lawmakers about the educational television network’s business practices at a Friday meeting.
The interim chancellor of the San Bernardino Community College District is recommending that the district convert its public TV and radio stations into a media training lab by 2023.
“It starts shattering the monolith of Latinos or youth,” says a contributor to Every 30 Seconds.
“The faith that we have is like blood in our bodies. … We can talk about real life, and you’ll see the stream of faith come through that.”
The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists is representing both groups.
NPR Music’s “Louder Than a Riot” explores hip-hop as a “microcosm for the Black American experience” with the criminal justice system.
The planned gift was made as part of a larger university fundraising campaign.
Greene will leave Dec. 29 to “focus on other projects,” according to the network.
An excerpt from a new book suggests that NPR look to the past and overseas for examples of programming with wider appeal.
“Let’s hear more authors’ diverse views and voices on-air. Let’s not let video gaming and tablet surfing displace our imaginations exploring books.”