Nice Above Fold - Page 859

  • Digital theatrical screenings before PBS debut of Warhol bio

    Ric Burns’ four-hour American Masters bio, Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film, is having digital theatrical debuts hosted by pubTV stations that began Sunday in 20 cities around the country, WNET announced. (The late artist’s brother, Paul Warhola, will appear at tomorrow’s screening in the Pittsburgh area, where Warhol grew up.) Emerging Pictures, which seeks to put arthouse films on more screens around the country, is distributing to theaters [15 listed].
  • Common Cause targets CPB Board nominee

    “He is the wrong man in the wrong job at the wrong time,” says Common Cause President Chellie Pingree, in a press release announcing an e-lobbying campaign against Senate confirmation of CPB Board nominee Warren Bell. The nominee’s lack of interest in the field and provocatively anti-P.C. sense of humor disqualify him for the appointment, Common Cause says in a report posted on its website today.
  • Nielsen to expand into radio ratings?

    TV ratings juggernaut Nielsen Media Research is in talks with Clear Channel’s electronic ratings service about measuring radio listening, potentially threatening Arbitron’s control of the industry, Mediaweek reports.
  • State accuses contractor with safety violations in Iowa tower deaths

    A state agency has cited a tower service company for three violations of safety regulations involved in a fatal accident on an Iowa Public Television tower near Des Moines, TV Technology reported. Three workers, including the proprietor of the company, were being lifted to change light bulbs on the tower when they fell 1,200 feet and died in the March incident.
  • Caleca and Mendes depart PBS this month

    Two of PBS’s top technical officers are leaving this month: Ed Caleca, senior v.p. of technology and operations, and Andre Mendes, chief technology integration officer, according to TV Technology. Caleca leaves Sept. 15 and Mendes Sept. 29, the magazine’s website said.
  • Amy Goodman to begin newspaper column

    King Features Syndicate will begin distributing a weekly current-affairs column by Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman on Oct. 24, Editor & Publisher reports. She predicts “Amy Goodman: Breaking the Sound Barrier” will bring out voices of the “silenced majority.” Goodman and her journalist brother David are co-authors of this year’s Static: Government Liars, Media Cheerleaders, and the People Who Fight Back, now available at Wal-Mart!
  • From the Top’s kids bring classical music back to TV

    “When you see these kids, that’s better than anything you can create in your mind."
  • PRI to launch evening comedy/variety show

    This fall Public Radio International will launch Fair Game with Faith Salie, an hourlong evening program featuring interviews, political satire and in-studio musical performances. Host Salie has done standup comedy and appeared on TV shows including Significant Others and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
  • Performance Today, SymphonyCast move to APM

    Beginning early next year, American Public Media in St. Paul, Minn., will produce public radio’s Performance Today and SymphonyCast. NPR will end production of the shows as it prepares an online music service, which will include the classical music shows and other offerings from APM. (Coverage in the Washington Post.)
  • Conclusions and speculation on the effects of tots' TV

    The New York Times reviews recent research findings on what toddlers learn from television while Slate speculates on whether there’s a link between autism and TV watching in early childhood.
  • WNIT to relocate to South Bend

    WNIT in Elkhart, Ind., plans to move to downtown South Bend in 2009, taking over a building to be vacated by the local CBS affiliate.
  • WTC's blue and white collar heroes

    Of the two documentaries airing tonight that recall the fiery collapses of the World Trade Center’s twin towers, New York Times Critic Virginia Heffernan prefers Spike TV’s program over PBS’s. “Once you give in to the program’s pointy-headedness, though, the pedantry is not worthless,” she writes of Nova’s “Building on Ground Zero.”
  • Bozell to hand over reins of PTC

    Brent Bozell will step down as president of the Parent’s Television Council, the group that led the charge against broadcast indecency after Janet Jackson’s 2004 “wardrobe malfunction.” His successor is Tim Winter, a former NBC executive who wants to work collaboratively with broadcasters, reports the Los Angeles Times.
  • Claim: New TV tech will double visible color palette

    Researchers in Switzerland say they’re developing a nano technology that will allow future TVs to present every color the human eye can see, or roughly double the range offered by current plasma, LCD and projection screens, Wired reports. It will likely take at least eight years to get the technology, which uses an elastic, rather than fixed, diffraction grating that can be tuned to present additional colors, into commercial products.
  • Emmy broadcast prompts obscenity complaint

    The Los Angeles Times reports that the Parents Television Council filed an FCC complaint over obscenities uttered by two actresses during the Aug. 27 live telecast of the Primetime Emmy Awards.