Nice Above Fold - Page 512

  • Sale approval delay by FCC hinders fundraising efforts at KUSF-FM

    The FCC has yet to approve the sale of University of San Francisco’s KUSF-FM, which was announced 16 months ago, reports the Bay Citizen. “It’s extremely unusual,” said Michael Couzens, an Oakland, Calif., communications attorney and former FCC staffer. “The mentality of the staff is shaped by the fact that commercial entities lose their financing if they dink and dunk around for months and years.” And because the deal isn’t finalized, federal rules prohibit KDFC from airing pledge drives, “a huge loss as it attempts to remake itself as a nonprofit,” Bay Citizen notes. “The KUSF delay has definitely impacted us, and we hope the FCC will come to a decision soon,” said Brenda Barnes, president of classical music giant KUSC.
  • Ford backs for-profit newsroom

    A recent Ford Foundation grant to the Los Angeles Times highlights the heightened competition pubcasters face for philanthropic dollars in a fast-changing media world. The $1.04 million two-year grant to the newspaper, a subsidiary of the Tribune Company media conglomerate, marks the first time Ford has directly supported a major for-profit daily. The money will be used to hire staff members to cover new and expanded beats, including immigration and California’s prison system. The decision to pay for additional reporters, Ford spokesman Alfred Ironside explains in an email, resulted from the grantmaker’s exploration of “new models for sustaining quality, independent journalism that reaches more people at a time when newsrooms are under stress.”
  • Design adapts new KPCC website to multiple mobile devices

    KPCC.org, the website for the Pasadena, Calif., pubradio station, has relaunched with a responsive web design that automatically adapts to viewing on smartphones, tablets and desktops — an especially useful feature for the 17 percent of its audience that accesses the content on mobile devices. The site also features a new section specifically for video reports, a daily rotation of featured comments, and redesigned navigation and audio player. “Content silos are one of the toughest problems many news organizations face,” wrote Sean Dillingham, the station’s senior user experience designer, in a post announcing the redesign. “KPCC was/is no different: we produce radio stories, blog posts, program segments, events, videos, and more.
  • Sesame Workshop lays off "approximately a dozen" staffers

    Sesame Workshop, parent company of Sesame Street, has laid off around 12 people, the entertainment news website Deadline Hollywood is reporting. “So far the big cuts have been in the Digital Media department,” the site said. The Workshop declined to answer specific questions on the layoffs from Current, but emailed this statement: “As a result of our FY13 strategic planning process, we have shifted some resources to better align with our strategic priorities and new opportunities. Unfortunately, this has resulted in the elimination of approximately a dozen positions.” Gary Knell, Workshop c.e.o. for almost 12 years, announced last fall that he would take the helm at NPR in January (Current, Oct.
  • Groups ask PBS, WGBH to end sponsorship relationship with Chick-fil-A

    Three high-profile organizations have announced a campaign to urge PBS and WGBH to drop the sponsor Chick-fil-A from the children’s show Martha Speaks. In a joint statement Wednesday (May 23), the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, Public Citizen and Corporate Accountability International said that in 2011, 56 million Chick-fil-A Kids’ Meals were distributed in Martha Speaks co-branded bags, and those meals “can contain as much as 670 calories, 29 grams of fat, and 25 grams of sugar.” The groups also said the Chick-fil-A sponsorship “marks the first time advertising before and after a PBS children’s show has run simultaneously with an in-restaurant promotion.”
  • WXXI news director hangs 300 feet in the air for "Audio Postcard"

    Julie Philipp, news director at WXXI in Rochester, N.Y., got out from behind her desk last week — to dangle off the side of a downtown building for an “Audio Postcard.” The adventure was part of the local Boy Scout Council’s 21 Stories for Scouts fundraising event. Participants collecting more than $1,000 get to rappel down 309 feet, or 21 stories, from the roof of the First Federal Building. The council invites members of the media to participate the day before. “I thought it would be a unique way for WXXI News to highlight the commitment we’ve made to covering issues related to at-risk youth in our community,” Philipp told Current.”I
  • APM's "Saint Paul Sunday" signing off in June after 32-year run

    Broadcasts of Saint Paul Sunday, a weekly classical pubradio offering from American Public Media, are ending after 32 years. The last new episode was produced in 2007. APM notified client stations that the last show would air June 24. In its memo, APM said the program was launched in 1980 “on a very simple premise: we wanted to give listeners intimate access to how music was created at the very highest level.” Host Bill McGlaughlin introduced listeners to “the classical world’s absolute top talent,” APM said, including Renée Fleming, the Emerson String Quartet, Chanticleer and Anne-Sophie Mutter. The program earned a George Foster Peabody Award in 1995.
  • Romney again calls federal support of PBS "unnecessary," suggests advertising

    In an interview with Time magazine, Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney once again targets PBS for funding elimination. His comments echo previous statements last December. “I’ve laid out a whole series of areas that I will reduce spending,” the former Massachusetts governor tells Time reporter Mark Halperin. “And I’m going to eliminate some programs that I think are duplicative and unnecessary. I’ve talked about Amtrak subsidies, subsidies to PBS, subsidies to the endowment for the arts, to the endowment for the humanities.” “I like PBS,” Romney says. “I’d like my grandkids to be able to watch PBS. But I’m not willing to borrow money from China, and make my kids have to pay the interest on that, and my grandkids, over generations, as opposed to saying to PBS, look, you’re going to have to raise more money from charitable contributions or from advertising.”
  • Ciecalone resigns from KVCR after investigation

    KVCR President Larry Ciecalone, who had been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation in March, has resigned, reports the Press-Enterprise in Riverside, Calif. Ciecalone has led the dual licensee serving San Bernardino and Riverside counties since 2003. His resignation is effective May 31. In late March, Ciecalone had been placed on leave pending investigation of an undisclosed matter. “No reason was given for Ciecalone’s paid leave last March, nor his reasons for resigning,” the newspaper noted.
  • Young game developers honored at 2012 National STEM Video Game Challenge

    WASHINGTON — A competition that gives middle- and high-school students a taste of what it takes to develop educational video games awarded more than $80,000 in prizes to top contestants in the second annual STEM Video Game Challenge. In a crowded auditorium full of proud parents and jubilant children, a series of distinguished speakers congratulated winners during the May 21 awards ceremony and spoke about their personal connections to video games and STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) education. Youth winners await their turn on stage. “Everybody should be proud of these young people,” said Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), who serves on the “E-Tech Caucus” in Congress, which advocates for educational software.
  • Judge dismisses part of broadcasters' suit against online TV streamer Aereo

    A portion of a lawsuit brought by WNET, PBS and several other broadcasters against online television startup Aereo has been dismissed, reports Reuters. U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan in Manhattan turned down a claim of unfair competition but left intact a copyright infringement argument. Aereo, backed by billionaire media magnate Barry Diller, launched in New York City in March, charging subscribers $12 a month to stream over-the-air content to cellphones, tablet computers and other devices. Broadcasters filed the lawsuit that month.
  • "It's print as an accessory" — Voice of San Diego launches magazine

    A Knight Foundation-backed magazine, in print and digital versions, is part of the Voice of San Diego’s new membership program. Seem backwards? After all, Voice of San Diego is a web-based nonprofit news organization. However, said Scott Lewis, c.e.o., said on the Knight website, “We put several stories out every day. Some longer and more in-depth than others. When we gather them all up over the course of a month, we have reason to be proud. At the same time, not everyone can keep up with the daily chaos of news, let alone read some of our longer pieces.” Lewis heard about MagCloud, a self-service publishing platform, and pitched the idea to Knight.
  • Frontline and ProPublica team up for cell tower death story

    Today, Frontline and nonprofit investigative newsroom ProPublica released their long-awaited collaboration on the issue of poor accountability and safety among cellphone carriers and the subcontractors they hire to maintain and build the nation’s over 280,000 cell tower sites. The investigation found that 50 cell tower climbers have died between 2003 and 2011. The ProPublica article details how lackluster safety regulations, the overbearing push for cell tower expansion, and a culture of recklessness have caused this boom in accidental fatalities. In addition, the investigation found that many cell phone carriers deliberately hide behind layers of subcontractors, thereby recusing themselves from most liability and preventing easy linkage between cell carriers and the deaths.
  • NEH is offering grants for analytical docs looking at humanities themes in one or more foreign countries.

    June 27 is the endowment’s deadline for receiving proposals for the project, Bridging Cultures through Film: International Topics. The endowment expects to award five grants, including development grants of up to $75,000 each and production grants of up to $800,000 each. Resulting nonfiction programs, ranging from a broadcast hour to feature-length, will take an international look at ethical, religious, historical and other issues, biographies and histories. Nonprofits, governments and private or public institutions of higher education are eligible. Info: tinyurl.com/NEH-bridging. Contact: NEH Division of Public Programs, 202-606-8269 or publicpgms@neh.gov.
  • PRI receives $1.6 million grant from Gates Foundation for health coverage

    Public Radio International has received a two-year, $1.6 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to support reporting on health and development on its program PRI’s The World. The funds will help PRI “further extend the reach and impact of coverage around critical issues affecting the world’s poorest nations, such as maternal health and infant mortality; water, sanitation and hygiene; vaccines and immunization; infectious and chronic diseases; and food security and nutrition,” the producer said in a press release. The release also alludes to PRI’s development of “an ambitious strategic framework” to step up engagement on digital platforms around The World’s reporting.