Nice Above Fold - Page 562

  • Congressional Research report details challenges facing PEG channels

    Public, educational and government (PEG) channels are facing numerous financial, policy and technological obstacles, according to a new Congressional Research Service report. “The study lays out what we have been saying all along,” said John Rocco, president of American Community Television (ACT), tells Broadcasting & Cable. “PEG access television has been under attack and is in desperate need of a Congressional fix.” The report also references the Community Access Preservation Act (CAP Act, HR 1746), backed by ACT and introduced by Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.). The bill, opposed by cable operators, would allow jurisdictions to require cable companies to provide at least 2 percent of gross cable revenues in PEG support and would prevent charging subscribers for digital to receive PEG channels migrated from analog tiers.
  • Kerger in Singapore: Content, innovation, sustainability

    PBS President Paula Kerger gave the keynote address Thursday (Oct. 27) at the Public Broadcasting International meeting, going on this week in Singapore. Kerger told the audience that she recently read the book Great by Choice, by Jim Collins, which examines why some companies thrive in uncertain times and others simply get by. “His findings were surprising, but absolutely relevant to all of us in this room,” she told the representatives from 20 noncommercial broadcast entities. Collins found “that the best leaders did not take more risks or have grander ambitions,” Kerger said. “Instead, the companies that succeeded were led by people who were more disciplined, more empirical, and more paranoid.
  • Milwaukee and Seattle lose longtime public broadcasters

    Two pubcasting deaths of note: — Art Langlas, “Mr. Auction” both behind and in front of the camera for Milwaukee Public Television Friends, died Wednesday (Oct. 26) of complications after surgery. He was 65. As auction director, Langlas raised $1 million a year over the past decade for the Wisconsin station. “He was the face of the auction,” said Mike McKenzie, who now oversees the annual weeklong fundraiser. “When he was out in public and someone recognized him, he really got a kick out of that.” Ellis Bromberg, MPTV general manager, noted that the Great Channel 10 Auction “is still an event in southeastern Wisconsin, and it is an event because of him.”
  • Pubradio documentaries win Third Coast honors

    Eight radio docs, including pieces for Radiolab, This American Life, Marketplace and WNYC Radio, won trophies from among 300 entries in the Third Coast/Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Awards, presented Oct. 23 in Chicago. The winners are listed below and pictured on the Third Coast Festival’s Facebook page. Documentary, Gold Award: “The Wisdom of Jay Thunderbolt,” by Nick van der Kolk and sound designer Brendan Baker, with Nick Williams, a Love + Radio podcast “for mature audiences.” (On the Nieman Journalism Lab blog, Annie Gilbertson discusses van der Kolk’s podcast about a Detroit strip club, which features profane language and dark subject matter.)
  • KLRN hires new station manager

    Mario A. Vazquez, a board member of the Alamo Public Telecommunications Council, is the new executive vice president and station manager of San Antonio’s KLRN-TV. Vazquez was previously head of the contract administration department at NuStar Energy. “Mario brings exceptional skills to this new position,” said KLRN President William Moll in a statement. “He was trained as a classical pianist, practiced as a paralegal, holds a degree in political science, and has long demonstrated a commitment of service to the communities of San Antonio, Laredo and South Central Texas.”
  • Dish Network files with Supreme Court over noncom carriage mandate

    Dish Network is asking the Supreme Court to rule on what First Amendment test should apply to its Congressional mandate to carry noncommercial stations in HD over other stations, reports Broadcasting & Cable. “At issue, if the Supremes take the case, could be the underpinnings of entire government must-carry regime,” reporter John Eggerton notes. Dish filed a petition for certiorari, asking for a review of a decision last February in which the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Congress could require a private party (Dish) to grant preferential treatment to noncommercial stations. Dish claims the government is favoring one type of speech over another.
  • Anonymous last-minute gift of $250,000 saves KCPW from default

    An anonymous donor has emerged to save pubradio KCPW in Salt Lake City from a loan default on Nov. 1, reports The Salt Lake Tribune. The $250,000 gift came just as Mayor Ralph Becker threatened to block a second attempt by the City Council to loan the money to the struggling station. Attorneys for the city’s Redevelopment Agency deemed the aid inappropriate (Current, Oct. 17). The donation “came as a complete surprise,” said Ed Sweeney, president of the station’s owner, Wasatch Public Media, in a letter to members and supporters, “and was offered because of the inability of the city to provide the short-term funding.”
  • Business magazine selects Alvarado as a Top Hispanic Influential

    Joaquin Alvarado has been named one of the Top 100 Hispanic Influentials by HispanicBusiness magazine. Joaquin, American Public Media’s senior v.p. for digital innovation, was selected from among Hispanics of U.S. citizenship who have had recent and national impact, whose achievements inspire other Hispanics to similar endeavors, and who have promoted the advancement of Hispanics in the United States by their leadership, community involvement or professional achievements. “Innovation is key” to exerting a positive influence in the Hispanic community, Alvarado told the magazine, “because the Hispanic community and the minority communities in this country are oftentimes the early adopters of new technologies.”
  • Knight Foundation adds three tech thought leaders to board

    Three new-media innovators have joined the Knight Foundation’s board of trustees. The elections of Joichi Ito, director of MIT’s Media Lab; John Palfrey, professor at Harvard Law School and co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society; and Chris Hughes, Facebook co-founder, “emphasized the importance of technology and media innovation on the delivery of news and information to communities,” the foundation said in an announcement today (Oct. 25). “The addition of these three seminal thinkers and key actors in the world of media innovation — in the search for how to inform communities in the digital age — is a giant leap forward for Knight,” said Alberto Ibargüen, foundation president and a former board chairman of PBS.
  • Tips for tracking social media's impact in public radio newsrooms

    As more public media stations adopt social media for news reporting and user engagement, their next and more difficult challenge is to analyze the success of these efforts. Kim Bui, social media specialist and community editor for Southern California Public Radio/KPCC, has developed an aggressive methodology for tracking the impact of the station’s social media work, according to IMA blogger Amanda Hirsch, who interviewed Bui in a recent Q&A. “We use metrics to back up a lot of decisions,” Bui says. “We track as much as we can about how we use social media, using any method we can. We use Chartbeat, Google Analytics, Facebook Insights and software called Argyle Social to track almost everything we do socially – from the Twitter and Facebook widgets we put on the SCPR site to how far a particular story was taken socially.”
  • Charlie Rose talking to CBS about role on The Early Show

    Longtime PBS talk-show host Charlie Rose says he’s “having conversations” with CBS about possibly joining The Early Show, Rose revealed in a conversation with The Daily Beast’s Howard Kurtz.”I’m intrigued by the fact that they want to do it differently,” Rose says. “They understand that their success will not lie in duplicating what’s already on morning television.” Later, when the New York Times asked if that meant Rose might leave his namesake program, he replied, “not under any circumstances.”
  • APTS elects Bob Kerrey as trustee

    Former U.S. Sen. Bob Kerrey has joined the board of trustees of the Association of Public Television Stations (APTS). Kerrey, who also served as a governor of Nebraska, is currently chairman of M & F Worldwide Education Holdings, parent company of GlobalScholar, Scantron and Spectrum K-12. Prior to joining GlobalScholar, Kerrey was president of the New School University in New York City. “I believe public television has an especially important role to play in the education of our children — and also in public safety, job training and other essential public services,” Kerrey said in a statement.
  • Stars turn out for Mark Twain Prize, to air on PBS

    Fan of the red carpet? You’ll enjoy PBS’s photos from the Kennedy Center of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, awarded Sunday evening (Oct. 23) to comedian Will Farrell. Big-name stars attending included actors Paul Rudd, Ed Asner, Conan O’Brien, Adam Sandburg and Molly Shannon, as well as PBS NewsHour’s Gwen Ifill. PBS members stations will air the show Oct. 31.
  • ITVS announces Global Perspectives selections

    The Independent Television Service has chosen eight international documentary projects from its 2011 call for the Global Perspective Project. This year’s selections “provide extraordinary access and insight into the daily lives and struggles of people who live in Uruguay, Iran, China, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Myanmar and India,” the CPB-backed ITVS said in a statement. Docs were selected from 476 submissions from 118 countries representing 72 languages. All eight are bound for the PBS series Independent Lens, P.O.V., and the international series Global Voices on the World channel. The 2012 ITVS International Call opens Nov. 1; deadline is Dec. 9.
  • Democracy Now! at 15 years: "People speaking for themselves"

    The six-hour, live streaming news coverage by Democracy Now! of Georgia inmate Troy Davis’s execution on Sept. 21 was viewed more than 800,000 times online, reports the New York Times in a profile of the show, which is celebrating its 15th year. The popularity of that reporting attests to “the hunger for this kind of information,” host Amy Goodman told the newspaper. “Yet there was no network that was there to cover this moment throughout the night.” Some fans as well as critics describe the show as progressive, the Times notes, but Goodman rejects that label and instead says it’s a newscast that has “people speaking for themselves.”