Nice Above Fold - Page 812

  • NPR to move just north of U.S. Capitol in 2012

    NPR will move into a new home in Washington’s emerging mixed use NoMA (North of Massachusetts Avenue) neighborhood in 2012, the network and District of Columbia announced today (press release). The company will move its entire Washington-based operation from its current home on Massachusetts Avenue to 1111 N. Capitol St. NE, site of the historic former home of the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company, built in1927 (map). Consistent with D.C. development practice, the original facade will be incorporated into the new 10-story office tower, which will include a 60,000 square foot newsroom for NPR’s radio and multimedia ops and a public space for live shows and events.
  • McIntyre: It's no longer necessary to fund public broadcasting

    Public broadcasting resembles the “live-in brother-in-law,” writes The Heritage Foundation’s Ken McIntyre in a column appearing in several newspapers. “For 40 years, taxpayers have paid the rent.” McIntyre says it’s time to cut pubradio and TV loose from government funding and let them “go it alone in the marketplace.” If PBS and NPR had no government funding, he adds, they would be less self-indulgent. Also, viewers and listeners would be more likely to give them money. Echoing Charles McGrath’s New York Times column “Is PBS Still Necessary,” McIntyre writes, “The original mission – to provide quality educational, cultural and public affairs programs – is now the province of dozens of specialty networks.” 
  • Starr: McCain 'broke the rules'

    In the lefty journal The Nation, media activist Jerrold Starr offers his take on the Pittsburgh pubcasting piece of the McCain/lobbyist issue.
  • Daljit Dhaliwal to be the face of upcoming Global Watch

    Daljit Dhaliwal has been chosen to anchor KCET’s upcoming Global Watch, an international news program premiering on PBS April 9. Dhaliwal is also anchor of Foreign Exchange, the international news program presented by Oregon Public Broadcasting and distributed by American Public Television. Global Watch, also streaming online, will examine perceptions of the U.S. abroad, incorporate reports from citizen journalists, and host discussion and gather stories online. Produced by KCET’s Bret Marcus, the program was initially imagined as part of a public affairs block for the PBS World multicast channel, to be produced by California Fault Line Productions, a nonprofit formed by KCET, KQED and PBS and headed up by former CNN producer Sid Bedingfield.
  • Sawaya stays at Pacifica

    Nicole Sawaya has agreed to stay on as executive director of the Pacifica radio network, according to interim e.d. Dan Siegel. She resumes her duties tomorrow.
  • Nonprofit leaders: hard to retain, tough to recruit

    Inadequate pay, burnout and overwhelming pressure to raise money are driving nonprofit executives to plot their exits within five years, and their potential successors describe these challenges as reasons why they don’t aspire to top leadership positions, according to a recent national survey of emerging non-profit leaders. The Washington Post and the Chronicle of Philanthropy [subscription required] reported on the survey findings yesterday.
  • FCC issues DTV education requirements

    The FCC today approved new DTV consumer education and reporting requirements for broadcasters and cable and satellite companies (press release). Broadcasters must choose one of three different plans to educate viewers and must report to the FCC on their efforts each quarter. Broadcasters can 1.) air a combination of PSAs and screen crawls with increasing frequency as the shut-off date gets closer; 2.) follow an alternate schedule put forth by the National Association of Broadcasters that calls for an average of 16 PSAs and 16 crawls per week; or 3.) noncommercial broadcasters only can follow the APTS plan, which requires 60 seconds per day of on-air consumer education, including at least 7.5 minutes per month between 6 p.m.
  • After a big score, deals sour and Utah station pulls back

    A small-town Utah public-radio outfit that expanded into Salt Lake City thanks to its founders’ deal-making acumen — and stirred controversy over their compensation — is now pulling back, planning to sell both the Salt Lake station and its costly AM booster.
  • Stations court, flirt, propose and part by Monterey Bay

    A proposed merger of two California pubradio stations fell apart when officials at California State University Monterey Bay voted to keep control of KAZU-FM.
  • Louisville's Partnership adopts new name

    The three-station Public Radio Partnership in Louisville, Ky., has renamed itself Louisville Public Media. “What does our new name imply? Simply put, it reflects our determination to refashion and reshape our organization in the on-line, on-demand world of digital media and provide a new era of service to our community,” says its website.
  • NPR apologizes for "dark continent," but should it?

    NPR apologized to listeners Feb. 16 after newscaster Jean Cochran referred to Africa as “the dark continent” in a newscast. “This is simply an outdated reference as well as being outrageously offensive,” said one of many listeners who complained. But the apology in turn drew criticism accusing NPR of hypersensitivity. Should the network have apologized? “Given the intense listener reaction, it would have been arrogant for NPR to ignore the use of the controversial term,” writes ombudsman Alicia Shepard. “But in not offering any serious explanation for its apology, NPR missed an opportunity for a broader discussion — on air, online, or both — about the power of language.”
  • Pubradio merger fizzles in California

    KAZU-FM in Pacific Grove, Calif., will remain under control of California State University Monterey Bay, the board of the school’s Foundation decided yesterday. (Coverage in the Santa Cruz Sentinel, and a university press release (PDF).) The decision ended a year of formal negotiations over a merger of the station and KUSP, a nearby pubradio outlet that airs some of the same programs as KAZU. “I’m sorry the university has chosen to go it alone, and pass on this opportunity for us to work together to serve the public,” said Terry Green, KUSP’s g.m., in a press release (PDF).
  • Prediction: Waylon Smithers will dodge questions about sexual preference

    This weekend’s installment of The Simpsons will feature Terry Gross, host of public radio’s Fresh Air, starring as herself, according to the PRPD blog. (NPR release.)
  • Post-IMA ruminations lean negative

    This year’s recently concluded Integrated Media Association conference has inspired some pessimism among pubcasters keen on new media. John Proffitt of Alaska Public Telecommunications wrote on his blog: “In my (current) view, IMA appears to be at an impasse. We seem to have reached a point where integrated media advocacy has given out, where recommendations and demonstrations fail to move our organizations to meaningful action.” Responding on his own blog, independent producer Stephen Hill foresaw a bleak future for public radio and added: “After six or seven years of trying to push the river, I’ve regretfully come to believe that the forces that control the legacy public media system — both public television and public radio — are simply too entrenched, too torpid, too scared, and too innovation-phobic to respond meaningfully to the challenges of the digital era.”
  • Excuse me, what is that music you play when you read the stock figures?

    While WNYC’s Andrea Bernstein is tutoring journalists in Bhutan (earlier item), Marketplace reporter Lisa Napoli has a Bhutanese radio producer shadowing her while she subs as morning host for the APM business newscast. Her guest is Ngawang Pem, 25, a deejay and producer from the youth-oriented Kuzoo FM, first nongovernment station in Bhutan, which is adopting democratic forms under a limited monarchy and installing a new, young king. Napoli has volunteered her help on two trips since Kuzoo launched last year.