Nice Above Fold - Page 981

  • The Seattle Weekly looks again at KCTS’s precarious financial situation, and rants against the “sordid tricks” the station turns to at pledge-time.
  • Burton Paulu passed away March 8 at the age of 92, report The Star Tribune and The Minnesota Daily. Paulu directed KUOM in Minneapolis, led the National Association of Educational Broadcasters and pioneered in educational radio.
  • The Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) takes issue with NPR’s coverage of a bombing in Israel earlier this month.
  • “Let’s call it what it is: It’s ‘state television,’ with all that implies,” writes Roger Smith in a harsh critique of public TV at TomPaine.com (a website edited by John Moyers–son of Bill).
  • PBS is negotiating deals for distribution of its kids and primetime programming via cable’s video-on-demand platforms, according to Deron Triff, PBS’s v.p. of digital ventures, in an interview with Tracy Swedlow’s Interactive TV Today.
  • Newsday‘s Noel Holston compares public TV pledge drives to black-velvet Elvis portraits.
  • More public radio stations than ever could change hands this year, reports an Associated Press article spurred by KQED’s recent acquisition in Sacramento.
  • In master control, Fred Rogers re-enters my life

    Mister Rogers was one of the first programs that I can remember watching. I was, of course, part of the show’s target demographic back then. I can’t recall much from my preschool years, but I do know that I loved the trolley, I loved the neighborhood and I loved Fred Rogers.Like many early loves, it faded with age and distance. I moved on to programs intended for older kids: flashier, action-oriented, violent in the ways that caregivers and watchdogs lament and children adore. For the most part, I forgot about Fred and his neighborhood, reminded only on occasion by the parodies that proliferated in the ’80s as yesterday’s innocents grew into sarcasm and despair.
  • Frontline‘s producers objected to similarities between their PBS public affairs documentary series and the ABC reality show, Profiles From the Front Line, reports the Boston Globe. [scroll down to third story]
  • “What Mr. Rogers could have taught Michael Jackson” in Sunday’s New York Times.
  • J.J. Yore, new v.p. of programming at Marketplace Productions, hopes to collaborate with L.A. station KPCC on projects such as a series about pop culture, reports the L.A. Times.
  • The Washington Post profiles Amy Goodman, host of Pacifica’s Democracy Now!: “Her Edward R. Murrow comes always with a twist of Emma Goldman.” Goodman was also in the news when she was arrested at a anti-war protest at the White House. Pro-peace reporting from Goodman and others increased Pacifica’s take in its latest round of fund drives. Not surprisingly, Pacifica’s news probably soothes more minds than it changes, notes a Houston Chronicle article.
  • CPB will focus on three initiatives to assist public TV

    Wielding a grim financial analysis of public TV by a big-name consulting firm, CPB has begun a campaign to glue together a consensus supporting three initiatives to end the stagnation: catching up with other nonprofits in attracting “major gifts” of $1,000 or more from donors; improving station efficiency, especially by consolidating operations; using program research more effectively and taking other unspecified steps to re-examine public TV’s “approach to national programming.” CPB President Bob Coonrod and Chief Operating Officer Kathleen Cox discussed the initiatives in a Current Q&A. Coonrod said the CPB Board called for the consensus building in its statement of objectives adopted in fall 2002.
  • Fred Rogers: ‘No matter where he was, a lot of love came through’

    Fred Rogers occupied a quiet corner of the tumultuous television landscape, but his influence was profound and borne of the kindness, love and honesty he inspired in people.
  • The FCC changed the dates of this month’s filing windows for translator applications. (PDF, Word, text.)