System/Policy
Dispatches from central Florida: Station GMs report on Hurricane Milton’s impact
|
“We are tired, but we are all safe and well,” said Judith Smelser, president and GM of WMFE in Orlando.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/nancy-cassutt/page/86/)
“We are tired, but we are all safe and well,” said Judith Smelser, president and GM of WMFE in Orlando.
With more than 200 public radio stations and NPR itself now using the Grove content management system for their websites, public media’s digital infrastructure overhaul is moving forward.
More than 20 years ago, many reporters missed the importance of a blue-ribbon report that showed how to teach kids more effectively. Today’s journalists could still learn from those mistakes.
Host Tibisay Zea created “Salud” to counter growing health misinformation circulating within Latino communities.
A friend remembers NPR’s Midwest bureau chief, who died Oct. 11. “He summoned the courage to face death before it happened.”
WERU’s “Maine: The Way Life Could Be” built on a Zoom conversation to explore climate change, affordable housing and other topics.
Public broadcasters have been preparing underserved communities for Tuesday’s elections with projects focused on where and how to vote, as well as topics they’ll find on the ballot.
“Public radio … is a better thing both for Wally Smith’s successes, but also for the failures where he was willing to take on something that others were not,” said Tom Thomas, former CEO of Station Resource Group.
The dual-language podcast celebrates the soccer phenomenon before his final World Cup while exploring his complex relationship with Argentina.
Create Cooking Challenge winners from St. Louis and Tampa, Fla., present Indian- and Cuban-inspired recipes for the how-to channel’s website.
Hirasa succeeds Leanne Kaʻiulani Ferrer, who died last year.
For now, the bundle is available only to new members of 34 stations.