Nice Above Fold - Page 923
- FCC FM Auction 37 rolls on, and Boston’s WGBH has the high bid of nearly $4 million on a channel in Brewster, Mass. Most other pubcasters have been knocked out of the bidding. Meanwhile, at least two pubcasters — WKGC in Panama City, Fla., and Unalaska Community Broadcasting in Unalaska, Alaska — are likely to get AM stations in FCC AM Auction 84. Forms are due Jan. 18.
- Blogger Michael Petrelis learned that NPR news staffers Corey Flintoff and Michelle Trudeau donated to the campaigns of John Kerry and Howard Dean, violating NPR’s ethics codes. In a response to Petrelis, NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin addressed the issue in his latest online column, and the Chicago Reader takes it up as well. Meanwhile, NPR reporter Eric Weiner writes in the Christian Science Monitor that Palestinians should practice nonviolence. Other NPR reporters have previously sounded off on current events, raising questions about proper ethical conduct.
- Bob Edwards tells the Boston Globe that he threatened to sue NPR over the network’s suggestions that he was booted from Morning Edition because he declined to have a co-host. In fact, Edwards says, he was never offered the option. Newly installed at XM Radio, Edwards will visit Boston’s WBUR tonight in celebration of Morning Edition‘s 25th anniversary.
- “She’s not a lifestyle liberal,” says PBS host Tucker Carlson of Democracy Now‘s Amy Goodman, who appeared on his show Friday. “She’s actually interested in reordering society. . . . I thought she was a good guest.” Goodman, for her part, says she’s “concerned about a right-wing takeover at PBS.” Meanwhile, Barbara Streisand, or an electronic facsimile thereof, has plugged Democracy Now on her website.
Following Alistair Cooke
The BBC said it replaced the late Alistair Cooke’s Friday night Letter from America (at least temporarily) with A View from reports by correspondents in America, Australia, China, Brazil, South Africa, India and the Caribbean. The U.S. voice is Tim Egan, a New York Times reporter in Seattle. David Stewart describes Cooke’s longtime weekly Letter.
Featured Jobs