Nice Above Fold - Page 939
- Bob Edwards, back in D.C. in a break from his book tour, said NPR bosses didn’t give him the option of co-hosting the show before they reassigned him [RealAudio file.]. “I was never asked to be a co-host, I was never told I would have a co-host. None of that came up,” Edwards said on Diane Rehm’s talk show May 21. Program chief Jay Kernis has said NPR wanted two hosts for the show that Edwards hosted alone. He said he will remain at NPR “for the time being,” but owes it to himself and his family to review “attractive options” offered by others.
CPB’s TV Future Fund was illegal, GAO finds
A long-anticipated report on public television by the General Accounting Office, released May 21, advises Congress that CPB illegally diverted money intended for stations into the now-defunct Television Future Fund. The report, “Issues Related to Federal Funding of Public Television by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,” says CPB operated outside its authority when it took money from the part of its appropriation that Congress designated for station grants and used it for Television Future Fund projects. Between 1996 and this year, the Future Fund made grants for R&D projects to improve public TV operations and fundraising. But GAO said CPB can’t legally make selective grants from funds allocated for station grants.Peace declared in the great Bronx tower war
At a feel-good press conference May 13, all parties hailed the resolution of a decade-long fight over the tower of Fordham University’s WFUV-FM in New York City.The Daily News likened the scene to a Rose Garden peace accord between Israel and the Palestinians. Even Gov. George Pataki and Mayor Michael Bloomberg issued a joint news release endorsing Montefiore Medical Center’s offer to put the antenna atop its residential building. The new site is one-and-a-half miles from the scene of the station’s festering dispute with the nearby New York Botanical Garden, which says the present tower spoils the surroundings. Ralph Jennings, WFUV’s g.m.,
- “Real diversity. Real public television” is the slogan for Philadelphia’s maverick public TV station WYBE, and the phrase could be a précis of General Manager Sherri Hope Culver’s article in Television Quarterly, posted on the station’s site. (Beware — it’s a long PDF download.) Not a member of PBS, the station specializes in underserved minorities and is guided in part by 12 ethnic councils.
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