Nice Above Fold - Page 413

  • PIC names executive director, KCETLink reorganizes execs, and more comings and goings in public media

    Pacific Islanders in Communications, part of the National Minority Consortia, has promoted Leanne Ferrer to executive director and announced two additional appointments. Ferrer, a filmmaker who joined PIC in 2008 and created PIC’s first series, Pacific Heartbeat, steps up from her job as program director. PIC also promoted Amber McClure from content coordinator to digital engagement manager and hired Cheryl Hirasa to direct program development and content strategy. The changes were announced May 1. Ferrer previously worked for Disney Films and PBS Hawaii. In her new role, McClure, who joined PIC in 2010, will manage all social media and PIC’s newly redesigned website, as well as focus on partnerships with stations.
  • NPR will cancel 'Tell Me More', eliminate 28 jobs to balance budget

    An updated version of this article was posted May 28. NPR announced today that it will cancel Tell Me More, its weekday midday show with an emphasis on news and issues relating to people of color, effective Aug. 1. The network will also eliminate 28 jobs in its newsroom and library, eight of which are currently unfilled. “Today we are announcing changes in the newsroom to ensure we remain a leader in a dynamic and intensely competitive news environment, while living within NPR’s budget,” said Margaret Low Smith, NPR’s senior v.p. for news, in a memo to staff. Smith said the restructuring aims in part to meet a mandate for NPR to balance its budget by fiscal year 2015.
  • Show asking The Really Big Questions brings Dean Olsher back to radio

    Most people don’t take time to discuss what makes us human, but this public radio show wants listeners to stop and think.
  • PBS's live-action Odd Squad aims to ‘make math relevant’ for kids

    PBS Kids will expand the footprint of its math-focused programs with Odd Squad, a live-action TV series for school-aged children. The new show, which follows the fall 2013 debut of Peg + Cat, a preschool series presenting math concepts, will debut Nov. 26. Creators Tim McKeon and Adam Peltzman, who previously collaborated as television writers on another PBS Kids series for school-aged children, The Electric Company, are producing Odd Squad through Toronto-based Sinking Ship Entertainment and the Fred Rogers Company (which also produces Peg + Cat and Daniel Tigers Neighborhood for PBS). Odd Squad stars sleuths Olive and Otto, members of a detective agency who use math concepts to solve unusual mysteries around their town.
  • To follow paths charted by Localore, consider these ‘new realities’

    The second of two commentaries adapted from the Association of Independents in Radio’s recent report on Localore.
  • Monday roundup: Idaho PTV's strange debate, overstated "emergency" in CPBN fundraising email

    Plus: The University of Missouri's j-school welcomes "institutional fellows," and Bill Buzenberg steps down from the Center for Public Integrity.
  • Damaged transmitter delays license renewal for Houston's KPFT

    Houston Pacifica station KPFT-FM is preparing to ask the FCC for a third extension on its license renewal, a delay resulting from transmitter damage caused by a lightning strike two years ago. The station, part of the financially troubled Pacifica network, has been struggling to raise funds to replace the transmitter. It has operated at half power since March 2012 and is pursuing its third Special Temporary Authority from the FCC. By failing to operate at full power for so long, the station puts itself at risk of  FCC fines. KPFT General Manager Duane Bradley said the internal divisions plaguing Pacifica aren’t helping.
  • President Obama calls in tribute for Kasell's 'Wait Wait' sign off

    Carl Kasell capped more than three decades at NPR with a taping of his final Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! episode and an auditorium full of admirers.
  • Friday roundup: Matter announces third class, O'Brien wins PBS award

    Plus: NPR's ombudsman explains what he's been up to, and Storycorps plays a hand in the Sept. 11 Memorial Museum.
  • Survey finds growing group of Triple A stations looking for younger listeners

    Program directors from public radio's rock and folk stations are gathered in Philadelphia for shop talk and lots of live music.
  • FCC green-lights rules for TV spectrum auctions

    The FCC formally adopted rules today for the television spectrum auctions slated for mid-2015. Most of the provisions align with what the FCC has said leading up to today’s announcement. The commission formally declined to provide protections to low-power TV stations and TV translators. Neither facility category is eligible for protection under its current rules, the commission’s order said,  and shielding them would “unduly constrain flexibility in the repacking process and undermine the likelihood of meeting the objectives for the incentive auction.” The commission will open a special filing window for LPTV and translators that provide “important services” to select new channels, and establish an special process for relocating displaced stations.
  • Masterpiece Trust secures $3 million gift from San Diego donor

    SAN FRANCISCO – Amid previews of upcoming programming at the PBS Annual Meeting, including a groundbreaking 14-hour series on the Roosevelt family from Ken Burns, came extraordinary news of a record-setting donation for Masterpiece. Executive Producer Rebecca Eaton told attendees that the icon strand, through its Masterpiece Trust, will receive $3 million from longtime supporter Darlene Shiley on behalf of herself and her late husband Donald. Shiley’s local station, KPBS in San Diego, will share a portion of the contribution. The gift triples Shiley’s previously unprecedented $1 million donation in 2012. Since its inception in 2011, the trust has raised nearly $10 million for Masterpiece and local stations designated by donors.