Nice Above Fold - Page 779
Orlando's WMFE lays off 15 more staffers
WMFE is cutting 15 jobs and canceling The Arts Connection program due to falling revenue. The job losses at the Orlando station are 28 percent of its staff. Station prez Jose Fajardo said departing staffers include a radio reporter, two receptionists, a program scheduler and one person from engineering, membership and finance. The staff also must take two weeks of unpaid leave, and employer-matching retirement funds have been stopped for “the foreseeable future.” Other measures include scaling back janitorial services, cell phones and supplies. It’s the second time in five months the station has laid off staff; in October 2008, 10 positions were hit.Nonprofit event planners offer advice
The transcript for Planning Special Events During a Recession, an online chat for nonprofit fundraisers, is now available at The Chronicle of Philanthropy’s website. One question: What, if anything, are you changing about your events specifically because of the recession? Part of the answer from Jim Leighton of the Children’s Cancer Research Fund in Minneapolis: “We need to be sensitive to the fact that in a down economy lavish events may be seen as inappropriate.”Upside to lost timeslot: no worries about turning off core listeners
In the Loop, a Minnesota Public Radio show that reviews the week’s news with seriousness and satire, has lost its Friday evening time slot. The show, hosted by Jeff Horwich, will continue as a digital-only podcast and blog. In a posting to Facebook fans, Horwich described some “upsides” to the decision: freedom from deadlines and from worries about turning off “your typical core 55-year-old public radio listener” and “the traditionalists in our own company.” The Twin Cities Daily Planet published Horwich’s explanation to Facebook fans in full and compared the show to the Bryant Park Project, NPR’s short-lived experiment in targeting a “generally younger, less stodgy audience” with multimedia elements and interactivity.
Public, educational, government channel access prompts complaints
Annoyance is building nationwide over AT&T’s treatment of PEG channels (public, educational, and government). Its U-Verse IPTV system lumps all the public access programming — everything from city council meetings to local middle-school plays — on Channel 99. Viewers then must click to install an application and find their community in a list. The Chicago Tribune says the channels are “consigned to a digital ghetto.” FCC complaints have been filed, and at least one attorney general, in Illinois, is investigating.NPR Music to host, webcast SXSW showcase featuring the Decemberists
In a twist on its “exclusive first listens” to new releases, NPR Music will present the first live performance of the Decemberists’ forthcoming release on the opening night of this year’s South by Southwest Music conference and festival, March 18. The Portland-based band will perform all 17 songs from The Hazards of Love, a concept album that tells the story of a woman who is ravaged by a shape-shifting animal. NPR’s Bob Boilen will cohost the live webcast, which also is offered for broadcast by NPR stations, with NPR Music blogger Carrie Brownstein and David Brown of Austin’s KUT-FM. More details on this week’s edition of All Songs Considered and here.KQED-KTEH shed 30 jobs, cite double-digit losses in underwriting and major gifts
Northern California Public Broadcasting, licensee of KQED-TV/FM and KTEH-TV, will eliminate 30 jobs and cut 13 percent of its budget under a restructuring plan announced on Monday. Station memberships have dropped five percent since October, but underwriting is off 24 percent and major donor contributions are down 15 percent, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Although all TV productions are subject to future funding, KQED will continue to produce new episodes of local programs such as Quest, Check, Please! Bay Area, and This Week in Northern California, and the station will deliver three new hours of Jean-Michel Cousteau: Ocean Adventures to PBS this spring.
Schiller: ‘No reason for NPR to go it alone’ on the Web
An often touted and tabled proposal to recast public radio’s web presence as a combination of content from NPR and its member stations is gaining traction among leaders in the field. With strong support from its new president, Vivian Schiller, NPR is beginning to plan a pilot project that would demonstrate how stations’ local news efforts could be integrated with NPR content. Creation of a news portal that integrates pubradio’s world, national and local news coverage will also be endorsed by Grow the Audience, a research and consultation project managed by the Maryland-based Station Resource Group and funded by CPB. The recommendation in the Grow the Audience report, which has yet to be released, was developed in consultation with web strategists who described the online service opportunity that public radio could seize, said Tom Thomas, SRG co-chief executive.San Diego State's KPBS gets new g.m.
Tom Karlo is the new general manager of KPBS, the fifth in the nearly 50-year history of the San Diego State University station. He’s been assistant g.m. since 1992 and began at the station as a student intern three decades ago. He also is the vice chair of the California Public Television Board of Directors.Three days of Triple A music in Philly
Philadelphia’s WXPN opened early bird registration for the 9th annual NON-COMMvention, a May 28-30 conference featuring music showcases and sessions on the business of programming, funding and marketing Triple A music stations. ‘XPN is hosting the conference at its studios and the adjacent World Cafe Live concert venue on the campus the University of Pennsylvania. There’s no increase in last year’s bargain-rate registration fees. Hotel information and conference schedule are to be announced soon.OMN founder Mike Homer succumbs
Mike Homer, long-time Silicon Valley executive and founder of the Open Media Network, passed away yesterday. NPR’s Dennis Haarsager, who collaborated in developing the online video distribution system that Homer attempted to donate to pubcasting, writes: “Although we weren’t successful in Mike’s ultimate dream of giving this to a national public broadcasting organization, I’m convinced that we will eventually (and, I hope not too late) come to see Mike’s vision as important part of public media’s future.”Nine pubTV stations plan digicasting to mobile devices by year’s end
Broadcasters, including nine pubTV stations and more than 50 network affiliates, will launch mobile DTV in 22 markets later this year, proponents announced at the Consumer Electronics Show last month. Viewers will pick up the signals on devices such as cell phones, laptops and in-vehicle TVs.Options run out in Ohio college town as licensee guts its pubradio budget
In a southwestern Ohio college town, the public radio news station with seven full-time employees will become an unstaffed repeater for Cincinnati Public Radio under an agreement announced Jan. 22 [2009].Gonyea speaks at WNIN anniversary gala
NPR’s Don Gonyea was in Evansville, Ind., last week to help WNIN celebrate 40 years of pubcasting and raise a target $25,000 at its annual gala. Here’s a photo of the fun.Pubmedia inauguration project attracts 35,000 users
Inauguration Report ’09, organized by NPR, American University’s School of Communication and CBS, brought in more than 35,000 user contributions via Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, iPhone, Google Phones and text messaging. One of its creators, David Johnson, a professor at American University’s School of Communication, reviews the project, and its implications for the future of public media.Grants make for 'best year in a long time' at WGBH
Here’s a bit of positive news during this ominous economic time. A huge increase in grant support enabled WGBH to have a very strong ’08. Grant commitments grew year-to-year a hefty 70 percent to $121.8 million, from $71.7 million, as of Aug. 31, 2008. Many were PBS grants; its commitments to WGBH jumped to $83.8 million in 2008, from $28.3 million in ’07. “We had our best year in a long time last year,” Ben Godley, WGBH executive v.p., told The Boston Business Journal.
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