Nice Above Fold - Page 514

  • National Forum for Public Television Executives

    A majority of public TV stations voted to create the National Forum for Public Television Executives (the CEO Forum) at a Convention of Stations in Austin, Texas, on Nov. 5, 1997. Current covered the founding as well as the discontinuance of the forum five years later in July 2003. The forum had been created in an extended process by a committee called the Core Working Group, initially appointed by America’s Public Television Stations (APTS). The Case for Change (draft), May 1997 Questions & answers about the process of creating the Forum (“Countdown 97”), drafted by the Core Working Group, 1997 Charter (as amended) for the National Forum for Public Television Executives, Nov.
  • KCUR picks new G.M.

    Nico Leone. Photo courtesy KCUR. KCUR-FM, Kansas City’s flagship NPR station, announced today that Nico Leone would succeed veteran general manager Patricia Cahill starting on Aug. 1. Cahill, who has run the station since 1987, initially reported her intent to retire on Sep. 22, 2011. Leone comes from St. Louis’ KDHX, a not-for-profit community station, where he was co-executive director. After a nationwide search process, Leone was selected by a ten-member search committee that included representatives from KCUR staff, the community advisory board, the NPR board, donors and volunteers. David Warm, chair of the search committee, said that, “Nico is exactly what we need to extend the excellence of KCUR into the future…Patty Cahill is leaving some big shoes to fill, and Nico will come as close as anyone can to matching her legacy.”
  • Lakeland Public TV gets $3 million in state bonds for new building

    After 32 years, Lakeland Public TV in Bemidji, Minn., will be moving to a new facility, reports the Bemidji Pioneer. “The reality is we’re really, really squeezed here,” Bill Sanford, c.e.o., said during the announcement at the station, on the campus of Bemidji State University. The newspaper noted: “Workspaces are set up wherever space is available; some are next to the drum room, so when practice is in session, it can be difficult to simply make a phone call.” The pubcaster secured $3 million in state bonds, and now has a total of $3.6 million toward the $4.2 million building project.
  • Indie pubcaster KCET secures national distribution deal with APT

    KCET, the L.A. pubcasting titan that split from PBS on Jan. 1, 2011 (Current, Oct. 18, 2010), has just inked its first large-scale national distribution initiative since achieving independence. KCET signed the syndication deal with American Public Television for Your Turn To Care, an original series which delves into the multifarious challenges faced by the Baby Boomer generation in caring for their aging parents and loved ones. The series is hosted by actress and writer Holly Robinson Peete, and features a wide variety of Hollywood actors, media figures, medical professionals, and academics dispensing advice and sharing personal care-taking stories The series can be seen on public television stations starting on July 1, 2012.
  • NPR facing $2.6 million budget deficit

    Five months into his tenure as NPR president, Gary Knell is grappling with a looming budget shortfall, according to the Washington Post. Corporate underwriting income has fallen off sharply and fundraising for major gifts and foundation grants has been slowed by the departures of two top staffers. The revenue shortfalls added up to a $2.6 million deficit through March, the half-way point of NPR’s fiscal year.  In a meeting with staff this week, Knell said he wanted to avoid cutting jobs or programs. “That’s the last thing I want to do,” he told the Post‘s Paul Farhi. But Farhi picked up word that program cancellations are being contemplated.
  • Bill Siemering’s ‘National Public Radio Purposes’, 1970

    “National Public Radio will serve the individual: it will promote personal growth ...”
  • Round 2 of Knight News Challenge: Data

    The Knight News Challenge, an international media innovation contest, revealed today that the second round of competition (with submissions accepted from May 31 to June 20), will be centered on the theme of Data. Photo via cip_sb on Flickr. The contest, which is part of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation’s $100 million plus “Media Innovation Initiative,” is split into three rounds this year. The first round (Feb. 27 — Mar. 17) featured the theme of Networks and received 1,078 applications. The field has since been winnowed to 52 finalists, and only 4 to 6 entries will be brought before the Knight Foundation trustees for consideration in mid-June.
  • Feature Story News to open four new bureaus

    Simon Marks Feature Story News, an independent TV news agency that works closely with many pubTV outlets, announced the opening of four new bureaus in Miami, San Francisco, Houston, and Los Angeles today at the PBS Annual Meeting in Denver, Colo. FSN is helmed by Simon Marks, a former president of MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. The Houston bureau will be based in the TV/radio newsroom of Houston Public Media, the Miami bureau will be based at WPBT-TV, the Los Angeles bureau will be based at PBS SoCal, and the San Francisco bureau will be based at KMVT-TV 15. Each bureau will be a two-person operation, with each staffed by an on-air correspondent and a video journalist.
  • Actress Meg Ryan lends star power to "Half the Sky," and PBS Annual Meeting

      DENVER, Colo. — At the PBS Annual Meeting, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof interviewed actress Meg Ryan during a luncheon presentation on Half the Sky. The Independent Lens two-part documentary, coming in October, is based on the book Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, by Kristof and his wife, Sheryl WuDunn. Ryan was one of several celebrity activists who traveled overseas with filmmakers and interacted with women bravely facing — and overcoming — horrendous conditions due to forced prostitution, gender-based violence and maternal mortality. The documentary is part of ITVS’s Women and Girls Lead initiative.
  • WTTW's local and national production departments to merge

    WTTW in Chicago is merging its national and local production departments, reports Time Out Chicago media writer Robert Feder. Over the years, WTTW National Productions has produced popular titles including Soundstage, Sneak Previews, The Frugal Gourmet and The McLaughlin Group; WTTW11 Local Productions handles shows such as Check, Please! and Chicago Tonight. Dan Schmidt, president of parent company Window to the World Communications, wrote in a memo to staff: “With this new focus, we are better able to leverage the creativity, experience and expertise of our existing staff to develop programming that appeals to local, national and international audiences.”
  • Pubcasting support letter in Senate has GOP signatures for first time in six years

    DENVER, Colo. — For the first time since 2006, a “Dear Colleague” letter to U.S. Senators requesting continued federal funding for pubcasting has Republican signatures, Pat Butler, president of the Association of Public Television Stations, told attendees at the PBS Annual Meeting. The letter, addressed to the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee led by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), has 39 signatures including three Republicans. On the House side, a similar letter to the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee led by Rep. Dave Reichert (R-Wash.) and Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) has 116 signatures that include six Republicans.
  • Montclair State University to become NJPR News headquarters

    New York Public Radio (which comprises WNYC-FM and WQXR-FM), announced today a new partnership with New Jersey’s Montclair State University, whose broadcast studios and production facilites will be the new home of New Jersey Public Radio’s news division. The managing editor of NJPR News is Peabody Award-winning journalist Nancy Solomon, and the newsroom will cover New Jersey news, politics, and public affairs. NJPR (owned by NYPR) was created in 2011 when NYPR purchased four defunct NJN stations from the state after Gov. Chris Christie axed NJN. The MSU news bureau will produce content for NJPR, WYNC, and other outlets throughout New Jersey.
  • Former NPR deputy managing editor hired by CIR

    Susanne Reber, who had left her position as deputy managing editor of investigations at NPR last week, was hired by the California-based Center for Investigative Reporting, CIR announced today. Reber built and led pioneering investigative units at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (2003-2009) and NPR (Jan. 2010 until last week). Reber will serve as the senior coordinating editor for multiplatform projects and investigations at CIR. Reber’s reporting team will produce work for all of CIR’s branded products, including The Bay Citizen and California Watch. Reber will start at her new position in June.
  • PBS stations need to "become YouTube of local community," Seiken says

    DENVER, Colo. — Jason Seiken, PBS Interactive chief, told a packed audience at the PBS Annual Meeting that “a magical opportunity will slip through our fingers if we don’t have the courage to change” and fully embrace the potential that video presents to public TV. “We are in the early stages of a two- to five-year land grab that will reshape the video industry in a way not seen since Hollywood in the early 20th century,” he said. “For media organizations, this video revolution will determine who wins, who merely survives, and who perishes.” Some 100 million Americans watch videos online daily; last year, YouTube had 1 trillion views, Seiken noted — and that number is doubling every two years.
  • This fall, Sunday 8 p.m. slot goes to BBC hit, "Call the Midwife"

    DENVER, Colo. — At the PBS Annual Meeting today (May 15), Chief Programmer John Wilson answered a question many programmers had been asking lately: What are PBS’s plans for 8 p.m. Sundays? Beginning in September, that spot will go to a Brit hit, Call the Midwife, a BBC drama based on memoirs of a young midwife in London’s East End in the 1950s. Wilson noted that when the show premiered in Britain in January, it scored higher audience numbers than Downton Abbey. Wilson also had good news regarding overall pledge proceeds so far this year, up 2.7 percent systemwide over fiscal 2011.