Nice Above Fold - Page 648

  • NPR retains outside firm to lead review of Williams dismissal

    After the mediasphere firestorm and political attack over last month’s firing of news analyst Juan Williams, critics of the controversial decision by NPR management were no-shows at this morning’s public session of the NPR Board at the network’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. NPR, which received a bomb threat after Fox News host Bill O’Reilly denounced the Williams firing and declared that he was taking NPR down, had security guards checking visitors with a metal detector and inspecting their bags. Those who wished to address the board were asked to sign-in, but no one did. In his last remarks as NPR Board chair, lay director Howard Stevenson said: “Nobody is thankful for where we are, but the past is prologue, and now we have to look to the future.
  • NPR finally "useful" to conservatives, columnist writes

    In his column today (Nov. 11), Washington Post columnist George Will says that “NPR’s self-immolation” in firing Juan Williams for his public comments on Muslims is “icing on conservatism’s 2010 cake.” He goes on: “From its inception in 1967, as a filigree on Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which in 1970 begat NPR, has been a solution in search of a problem. Forty-three years later, in the context of today’s information cornucopia, ‘public’ broadcasting — its advocates flinch from candidly calling it government broadcasting — is even sillier than would be a Corporation for Public Newspapers.” “But in 2010,” Will added, “NPR became useful.
  • Obama's deficit commissioners advise ending all CPB, PTFP support by 2015

    The co-chairmen of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, created by President Obama in February to help balance the budget, are recommending an end to CPB funding as of 2015, according to a draft report released today (Nov. 10). The report also advises zeroing out the Public Telecommunications Facilities Program (PTFP) and the Agriculture Department’s pubcasting grant program. “The current CPB funding level is the highest it has ever been,” the draft says, and cutting it would save nearly $500 million in 2015. The 50-page explanation of proposals insists that “everything must be on the table” for cuts or elimination.
  • Science journalism awards for pubcasting

    Pubcasters topped three of four electronic journalism categories in the 2010 AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Awards announced today. NPR won for its reporting on the Gulf Oil spill; Nova ScienceNow, a series produced at WGBH in Boston, for a segment on memory research; and Chedd-Angier-Lewis Productions for their PBS series The Human Spark, produced in association with New York’s WNET. Certificates of Merit were awarded to Oregon Public Broadcasting and Chicago’s WBEZ. The awards, presented annually by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, honor professional journalists for distinguished reporting for a general audience.
  • Continuing live election coverage? Count on Alaska's KTOO

    KTOO-TV in Juneau, Alaska, is streaming coverage of the state’s midterm election recount to determine its next U.S. Senator. Visit the station’s 360North live feed page to take a peek at the recount “action” in Anchorage — 15 teams of election officials sitting at tables eying write-in ballots, set to a soundtrack of soothing yet determined vote-counting music. (Right click the image to enlarge.) “While we don’t expect much drama or excitement, every Alaskan will be able to watch through our cameras,” Bill Legere, KTOO’s general manager, said in a statement.
  • Layoffs hit KPFA, protests go on-air

    The fight over staff cuts at Berkeley’s KPFA-FM has moved from the streets to the airwaves. A Nov. 8 decision by Pacifica Foundation Executive Director Arlene Engelhardt to dismiss the staff of the KPFA Morning Show — the local program that earns the most financial support from listeners — came under immediate fire. Engelhardt proposed to replace the morning news staple with another program from Pacifica’s Los Angeles outlet, KPFK. The KPFA Morning Show team — Aimee Allison, Brian Edwards-Tiekert, Laura Prives and Esther Manilla — were ordered off the air after Monday’s program, but they managed to mount a “renegade broadcast” on Tuesday Nov.
  • WNED gets cooking with return to live show

    WNED’s popular live WNED Cooks is returning after six years, the Buffalo station says. A new show on “Family Favorites” airs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Feb. 26, 2011. Viewers submit recipes, and eight will be selected to create the dish in the studio that day. All recipes are compiled in a cookbook. Eileen Koteras Elibol returns as host (Image: WNED). No word yet on whether the episode will grow into a series.
  • KCET's new programming features old favorites, Asian offerings

    KCET in Los Angeles, which is cutting ties to PBS on Jan. 1 (Current, Oct. 18), announced early programming details to its members through a mailing this week. The Los Angeles Times reports that the station is “relying on a programming schedule that is largely available on DVD, and in some cases is decades old,” in addition to longtime local faves such as Huell Hower’s show and SoCal Connected. There’ll be several English-language shows from Japanese broadcaster NHK including NHK Newsline, a daily half-hour Asian news roundup; Asia Biz Forecast; Journeys in Japan and Your Japanese Kitchen.
  • Triple-A convo set at new Wilmington branch of World Cafe music hall

    Triple-A music’s 11th annual NON-COMMvention will be held next May 19-21 in a new branch of the WXPN-FM-affiliated music venue World Cafe Live, to be opened just seven weeks before in Wilmington, Del. World Cafe Live At The Queen will open April 1 after a $25-million renovation of an old downtown movie house called the Queen. WXPN and a partner opened the original World Cafe Live restaurant/bar/music hall in Philadelphia six years ago. The station, co-presenter of the NON-COMMvention (with TheTop22.com), describes the event as “the music industry conference where contemporary, noncommercial radio stations, artists and music industry professionals from all of the country convene to discover new music and discuss current industry trends.”
  • Colorado Public TV's nonprofit news arm gets healthcare reporting grant

    Colorado Public News, a nonprofit news project of Colorado Public Television/CPT12 in Denver, has received a $386,250 grant to cover the cost of reporting on healthcare for three years, it announced this week (Nov. 8). The health-oriented Colorado Trust is providing the support, which will cover a full-time health reporter to produce multimedia reports. Colorado Public News supplies weekly coverage to a network of 14 news media on several platforms: television, radio, Internet, print and mobile. Donors fund journalists in particular subject areas, including state government, science, education or the economy.
  • Former CPB Board chair suggests how to save funding

    Cheryl Halpern, who headed the CPB Board from 2005 to 2007, writes about what she sees as “A last chance to save CPB” in Monday’s (Nov. 8) Congress Blog from The Hill, coming at a time of increasing calls to zero out funding for public broadcasting. “The question that Congress needs to address is not whether the national providers of public programming should be shut down,” she writes. “It’s how to reform the legislation that created these institutions, given the changing media landscape.” She said Congress should consider amending the authorizing legislation so public broadcasters are “expected to adhere strictly to measurable and definable standards of accuracy and transparency.”
  • NTIA report says broadband usage increased sevenfold between '01 and '09

    A study released Monday (Nov. 8) of 54,000 American households shows that between 2001 and 2009, broadband Internet use rose sevenfold, from 9 percent to 64 percent. But “Exploring the Digital Nation: Home Broadband Internet Adoption in the United States” also reveals that significant gaps persist along racial, ethnic, and geographic lines, according to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. Also, nearly a quarter of households did not use the Internet at home, with most of those respondents citing lack of need or interest. The report is here in PDF format. It was compiled by the NTIA and the Department of Commerce’s Economics and Statistics Administration.
  • Mashable tracks social media's possible impact on Nov. 2 races

    Here’s an interesting roundup on Mashable.com of how various social media sites may have figured into the midterm election results. For instance: Facebook, the world’s largest social network with some 500 million user accounts, reported that in 98 tight races for House seats, 74 percent of candidates with the most Facebook fans won. Looking at 19 Senate races, 81 percent of those with more fans won. The widely read Mashable follows news in social and digital media, technology and web culture.
  • Pittsburgh's WQED finally marries off its sister station

    After trying for years, WQED Multimedia is succeeding in selling its second TV channel, WQEX, the Post-Gazette reported today. Ion Media Networks will buy it for $3 million, the newspaper said. The buyer, which will now have stations in 60 markets, was selected by the WQED Board from “an extensive list of interested parties,” WQED said. Since 2004, the unreserved UHF channel had been leased to Home Shopping Network and then ShopNBC as an outlet for shopping channels; WQED retained three hours a week for the FCC-required children’s programming. But WQED’s attempts to sell the channel were thwarted repeatedly by economic conditions, an unwilling FCC and other factors.
  • Where in the world is Red Green? Alaska!

    Even in far-flung Fairbanks, Alaska, Red Green pulls in the fans. Nearly 200 lined up Sunday (Nov. 7) at Big Ray’s outfitters store for the chance to greet the popular pubcasting character, reports the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Green, portrayed by actor and writer Steve Smith, continues nationwide on what may be his farewell tour, “Wit and Wisdom 2010.” The Fairbanks newspaper noted that Smith “arrived at Big Ray’s in a septic truck, dubbed the Red Green Limousine, which was provided by Glacier Point Pumping and Thawing.” If you haven’t had a chance to greet Green in person, you can always join the nearly 340,000 fans of his Facebook page.