Nice Above Fold - Page 897
- Chicago’s WTTW and CPB will join PBS in leading pubTV’s Ready to Learn grant projects. For the first year, they received a total of $23.2 million from the Department of Education, CPB said yesterday. The joint Literacy 360 project of CPB and PBS got $15.8 million for programming and outreach, aiming to measurably improve the reading of kids from low-income families. WTTW got $4 million to co-produce a children’s series, Word World. Grant-seekers scrambled after the department announced that the funding would be split among grantees and not entrusted entirely to PBS.
- After fining broadcasters $8 million for indecency in 2004, the FCC has slacked off in recent months, but Mediaweek reporter Todd Shields told On the Media that the regulators are just gearing up to attack again [mp3 audio file]. New Chairman Kevin Martin recently hired an indecency advisor, Penny Nance, a Christian activist for kid-safe media.
- Penn State’s pubTV and radio stations in Happy Valley dedicate their new building Sept. 8 and the TV station adopts the radio station’s call letters in October, moving from WPSX to WPSU. The combo shares a 96,000-square-foot building at the Innovation campus with the university’s continuing education, online World Campus and other outreach activities.
- WUKY-FM in Lexington, Ky., restored Garrison Keillor’s Writer’s Almanac to the air Friday, shortly after canceling the segment because of concerns about “decency.” The station’s manager “may now have discovered that playing it safe is the most unsafe thing an educational station manager can do,” say two commentators with ties to Kentucky ETV.
- Ken Tomlinson’s chairmanship of the U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors, overseer of VOA and other overseas broadcast units, compares with his guidance of CPB, writes Franklin Foer in The New Republic Aug. 15 issue — asserting that both are marked by partisan purges, ideological hirings and closed meetings. NPR’s David Folkenflik filed a similar report for NPR in June. Both Foer and Folkenflik refer to the Foreign Affairs magazine article by Sanford Ungar [partial article online], a former VOA director and ATC co-host who is now president of Goucher College in Baltimore. Tomlinson and criticized VOA Director David S. Jackson respond to Ungar’s article here.
- Three journalists quit a health program project at Connecticut PTV after top managers pressed them to interview execs of a hospital that partially funded the project, the Hartford Courant reported today [image of front page]. The Courant launched its critique of CPT yesterday with a piece criticizing its reduced local programming and the management of President Jerry Franklin. The newspaper points to Pittsburgh’s WQED as a station of similar size with more local production. No gloves are laid upon the Connecticut network’s radio wing.
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