Nice Above Fold - Page 977
- NPR’s Bob Edwards shared some forthright opinions with a Kentucky audience earlier this month. “The rise of cable TV and the Internet were supposed to democratize the media and give us many voices and numerous points of view,” he said. “Instead, market forces and deregulation have clobbered diversity.”
Back to these old houses
“As educational as magnetic,” says Los Angeles Times TV critic Howard Rosenberg. “Intimate, eye-opening and completely fascinating,” raves Salon’s Joyce Millman. “Brilliantly disguised as just another reality show . . . the very best TV show of 2002,” gushes Aaron Barnhart of the Kansas City Star. TV critics seem reluctant to hold back praise for 1900 House, Frontier House and 1940s House, the “living history” series brought to PBS by WNET’s Beth Hoppe and the British production company Wall to Wall Television. Since 1900 House debuted in June 2000, viewers, too, have marveled at how ordinary families face life without the technological and social conveniences of the 21st century.- WUNC-FM in Chapel Hill and a local group of critics recently met to discuss the station’s news fare, which came under fire for being too Establishment and dependent on NPR. “Most of the crowd characterized the network as not merely stuck inside the box, but as being the box,” writes The Independent Weekly.
- Burnie Clark, president of Seattle’s KCTS for 16 years, resigned abruptly Thursday, before publication of a Seattle Times series on problems at the station. The Times reported that KCTS owes $2.8 million in back payments to PBS and $229,000 in rent to the city. Eleven staffers were laid off and more than 20 may follow. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer said the station declined to renew the contract of production chief David Rabinovitch last week. Current reported earlier that KCTS had run deficits for six of the past seven years.
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