Nice Above Fold - Page 849

  • The Scientist profiles Radio Lab

    The Scientist writes up NPR’s Radio Lab. “People are still daunted by words like ‘physics’ and ‘biology.’ Say ‘science’ and they get a funny look in their eyes,” says co-host Robert Krulwich. “Say ‘Travolta’ and they know exactly where they stand . . . You’ve got to bring them over gently.” (Current article about the show.)
  • Andy Carvin's Waste of Bandwidth: The NPR Holiday Road Race

    Andy Carvin offers another peek into the wacky holiday customs of NPR employees. This time, it’s the NPR Holiday Road Race.
  • Winer takes offense at This I Believe plea for funds

    Blogger Dave Winer says he submitted an essay to This I Believe, the series airing on NPR’s newsmags, and never heard back–until he got an e-mail asking him for a donation. “I poured my heart into the essay, after spending a year thinking about what to write,” he writes. “Now I gotta wonder, if I don’t send the money, will they consider my essay. Or if I do send the money will they run it?” TIB co-producer Dan Gediman apologized, Winer reports (scroll down), and NPR has tried to distance itself from the whole thing. (Via Romenesko.)
  • Bloggers blast 'GBH report

    WGBH’s Beat the Press took a beating for an erroneous report about bloggers who are funded by political campaigns. The Boston Herald and the Boston Phoenix report on the controversy and a blogger for Blue Mass Group proposes his own set of remedies.
  • Rieu tour rakes in moolah for PBS stations

    The San Diego Union-Tribune reports on the money-making prowess of telegenic Dutch violinist Andre Rieu, whose current U.S. tour is being co-sponsored by many PBS stations.
  • WDET-FM manager resigns - 12/12/06 - The Detroit News Online

    Michael Coleman has resigned as g.m. of WDET-FM in Detroit after a year and a half in the job, reports the Detroit News. “I was hired to do a specific job and we changed the format, restored balance to programming, brought the roots music programs back and increased audience numbers substantially,” Coleman said. “I’m looking forward to the next great adventure.”
  • Lubinsky spins nostalgia for Sirius listeners

    T.J. Lubinsky, producer of PBS’s Doo Wop pledge specials, will spin vinyl and take listener requests on Doo Wop Gold, a weekly show debuting on Sirius Satellite Radio tonight, reports the Pittsburgh Post Gazette.
  • Producer 'pulls the plug' on "Inside Albany"

    AP reports that Inside Albany, a public affairs series broadcast by New York public TV stations since 1975, will shut down production on Dec. 31. “The frustration of not being able to cover more stories and the strain of running a business while running after news has caused us to decide to end Inside Albany’s long run,” the producers said in a statement.
  • Coda for the Classics: Public Radio's Failed Mission - Raw Fisher

    The Washington Post Marc Fisher surveys his city’s public radio offerings in the wake of news that a commercial classical station is likely to be sold and change format. “Washington will now become the largest city in the country with no classical music on the radio at all,” he writes. “Listeners will have no choice but to look to pay satellite radio for the classics–or for many other genres of music.”
  • Discovery cuts education group jobs

    Discovery is cutting 84 jobs from Discovery Education, the division that sells educational videos and digital educational material to schools, the Washington Post reports. Discovery Education aggressively expanded in 2004, buying up competitors as it tried to establish a leadership position in the K-12 market.
  • Redskins Owner Set to Buy Last Classical Station - washingtonpost.com

    WGMS-FM, a commercial station in Washington, D.C., that is the city’s sole classical outlet, could change hands and switch to a sports-talk format, reports the Washington Post. Dan DeVany, g.m. of public WETA-FM, would not speculate as to whether his station would return to a classical format if the sale of WGMS goes through. (Current article about WETA’s switch to all-news, 2005.)
  • RadioSutton: Promoting the Competition?

    John Sutton raises some questions about fears of competition from satellite radio: “If local programming is the future of public radio, especially the local content inserted in Morning Edition, then why is satellite radio considered serious competition? It shouldn’t be, unless the talk about local programming being the future is more bravado than reality.” Meanwhile, execs at Sirius Satellite Radio say they see value in a potential merger with XM Satellite Radio, their sole rival, reports the Washington Post.
  • Public radio and story

    Robert Paterson contemplates what lies at the heart of the public radio experience: “. . . [A]t the heart of good public radio is Story. And that Story is a ‘Transforming Process’ that at its best tells each of us about how to be more human.”
  • Boston newspapers on Becton's retirement

    The Boston Globe reports on WGBH President Henry Becton’s plans to retire and the Boston Herald posts the memo sent to WGBH staff this morning.
  • WGBH names Abbott to succeed Becton next October

    Henry Becton will retire as WGBH president Oct. 1, 2007, and will be succeeded by Chief Operating Officer Jonathan Abbott, the Boston station’s board unanimously decided Dec. 6. WGBH released this statement.