Nice Above Fold - Page 1010

  • Boxer KO’s naturalist in contest for May 14

    Programmers at PBS and at a key group of stations put themselves on a collision course when they scheduled two different programs for the night of May 14, 2002.
  • The Baltimore Sun blasts Maryland Public Television for firing Rukeyser.
  • The Baltimore Sun is reporting that Maryland Public Television and Fortune might bounce Louis Rukeyser from Wall Street Week.
  • NPR listeners have launched an Internet campaign to “Bring Back Linda” Wertheimer.
  • Hardball host Chris Matthews has apologized for dissing Jim Lehrer.
  • Glenn Heller, a devoted critic of Albany’s WAMC-FM, maintains an extensive collection of articles about the station at wamc.net. (Note: the enterprising Heller also owns the domains wgbh.net and wqed.net!)
  • The Berkshire Eagle has picked up Current‘s Feb. 25 story about the public TV series Visionaries.
  • Want to see how multi-channel digital terrestrial radio could work–if it ever becomes a reality? (As it stands, NPR is one of the few broadcasters pushing for the standard to include multicasting.) NPR commissioned Impulse Radio to create this demo to show how a listener could select either a music or talk stream on a digital radio. Clicking the link launches a download of the file.
  • Has NPR adequately addressed complaints over a report on anthrax investigations that mentioned the Traditional Values Coalition? NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin weighs in.
  • There’s now a website for the Public Radio Collaboration, formerly known as the Mega Project. This year’s collaboration will focus on the events and aftermath of September 11.
  • The latest Harper’s features an article by independent public radio producer Scott Carrier about post-Taliban Afghanistan, and Hearing Voices adds to it with pics and audio. (Warning: the first picture displayed depicts a dead man.)
  • Minnesota Public Radio responds to a snarky take on it in the Feb. 20 City Pages.
  • Over the weekend the Washington Post and New York Times both ran articles about public radio’s “Yiddish Radio Project,” which starts tomorrow on All Things Considered.
  • Former CNN Washington bureau chief Frank Sesno is collaborating with George Mason University, where he recently accepted a teaching position, and WETA-TV on developing a weekly local public affairs series.
  • The University of Kansas has withdrawn an invitation to have historian and NewsHour contributor Doris Kearns Goodwin speak … (Topeka Capital-Journal)