Nice Above Fold - Page 838
Unedited version of Crossroads soldier stories available
WETA, which oversaw production of the America at a Crossroads series, will make an uncensored version of one of the films, Operation Homecoming, available to stations that request it but hasn’t publicized the offering, reports the Los Angeles Times. PBS will only offer a sanitized version of the film depicting soldiers’ war stories, some of which include profanity. “Our policy, in the name of trying to eliminate errors so a station doesn’t unwittingly punch up the wrong version, is to keep it relatively clean and straightforward,” said John Wilson, PBS programming chief. The film is scheduled for 10 p.m.HearVox News: Community Broadcasters Agenda: revised
Check out this spoof revised agenda for this week’s Community Broadcasters Conference: “0815-1000: Case Studies in New Facilities and how building would have been easier with webcasting and everyone at RIAA dead from painful diseases.”The Making of a Personality, Chapter XIII
Tucker Carlson, briefly host of a PBS talk show between his gigs on CNN and MSNBC, will host a game show pilot for CBS, Who Do You Trust?, TV Week reported. With his game tryout on Dancing with the Stars, Carlson continued his climb to bow-tied personality status — someday potentially eclipsing altogether the memory of George Will, Pee Wee Herman, Bill Nye and even Orville Redenbacher.
PlaybillArts: News: WNYC Launches Capital Campaign With Largest-Ever Gift to Public Radio Station
New York’s WNYC-AM/FM has received a $6 million contribution from the Jerome L. Greene Foundation, the largest gift ever given to a public radio station, reports PlaybillArts. The gift goes to the station’s newly announced capital campaign, which will support its programming and a move to new offices and studios this fall.FCC sets date for NCE filing window
The FCC announced last week that it will open a filing window for noncommercial educational FM stations Oct. 12 (PDF). The window will be open for a week, and applicants must file electronically. The commission has not accepted applications for new noncommercial stations since April 2000.WBEZ's sister station, ":Vocalo"
WBEZ/Chicago Public Radio’s hitherto Secret Radio Project, intended to attract a distinct new audience, has gone public with the name of its new radio-Web service, :Vocalo.org. (That colon is part of an emoticon. The name combines “vocal” with “zocalo, a Spanish word for public square.”) Sign in and read more. In May the licensee plans to launch a newly developed public-affairs/talk format to air on WBEW, its outlet in northwest Indiana that now barely reaches into the South Side of the city but will get a stronger signal, the Chicago Reader reports. The g.m. is Wendy Turner, former membership director at WBEZ.
Want to count some translators?
To prepare for the digital broadcasting transition, CPB is looking for someone to audit and analyze the status of all translators that are a) owned and operated by pubcasters, or b) owned by other public or private entities but carry some pubcasting content. RFP available here, May 14 is the application deadline.Ifill on Imus
NewsHour correspondent and Washington Week moderator Gwen Ifill recounts her own brush with embattled radio host Don Imus’ race-baiting shtick in this New York Times editorial. In 1993, Imus reportedly said in reference to Ifill, the Times’ White House reporter at the time, that it was wonderful that the newspaper “lets the cleaning lady cover the White House.” Imus’ “sincerity seems forced and suspect because he’s done some version of this several times before,” Ifill writes. “I know, because he apparently did it to me.”Fans, critics speak up about Burns' series
Associated Press reports on the controversy over The War, the Ken Burns series slated to air in September, and PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler shares more viewer feedback on Latino activists’ campaign for revisions to the documentary.Landscape Artist: Television: The New Yorker
A New Yorker writer reviews This American Life‘s TV debut and along the way shares some criticisms of its radio incarnation: “Sometimes, after reading certain magazines or watching certain TV shows, people speak of feeling as though they needed to take a shower; after listening to “This American Life,” sometimes I feel I need to roll around in the dirt.”DCist: Considering NPR
DCist, a blog about the nation’s capital, interviews All Songs Considered producer Robin Hilton about the show’s series of live webcasts from local concert venues. “In general we look for bands that have something to say; bands that are breaking new ground or simply doing something interesting, however you define that,” Hilton says. (Via PRPD News.)PRPD News for Programmers: Stations named for CPB Community Engagement Initiative
CPB and the Harwood Institute have selected 12 public radio and TV stations to take part in a Community Engagement Initiative that will develop “new ways to make public television and radio stations more significant and deeply involved local organizations.”WQED originates teleconferences to steakhouse chain
Pittsburgh’s WQED Multimedia has begun generating revenue by originating high-def satellite teleconferences and musical performances beamed to specially equipped suites in 67 Morton’s Steakhouses around the country, to be demonstrated in a live news conference this afternoon. Velocity Broadcasting — a division of Elias/Savion Inc., Morton’s ad agency — is offering the “precision marketing” service to businesses as well as closed-circuit entertainment events in the Higher Definition Private Performance Series, which launched in October with a concert by trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, also originated by WQED.Weiss makes v.p. with endorsement of NPR newsroom
Ellen Weiss, an award-winning producer and editor in NPR’s news division over 25 years, will become its leader, the network announced last week. She is the newsroom’s first homegrown journalist after three veeps who established their journalistic credentials elsewher Weiss, who had been interim news v.p., moves up from her previous job as senior editor of the national desk to succeed Bill Marimow, who became editor at the Philadelphia Inquirer. Marimow, a Pulitzer Prize-winning print reporter, was credited with strengthening NPR’s investigative reporting during more than 2½ years at NPR, including eight months as top news executive. The announcement to the NPR News staff capped an exceptional week for Weiss, who was offered the promotion April 3 and learned the next day that she would share a Peabody Award.Discovery cuts 200 jobs
Discovery today cut approximately 200 staffers, or roughly 3 percent of its workforce, Broadcasting & Cable reports. Network management let go roughly 20 percent of the aggregate staffs of the Discovery Channel; Animal Planet; the Education group; and some Corporate Service groups.
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