Programs/Content
Kentucky Public Radio’s recipe for a statewide voter guide success
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It takes some planning to create a voter guide that geolocates users, but the payoff is entirely worth it.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/yolanda-sangweni/page/247/)
It takes some planning to create a voter guide that geolocates users, but the payoff is entirely worth it.
We in public media often refer to our little world as “the system.” If we are, in fact, an interdependent system, fundraising to support fellow stations and staffers in distress is the kind of thing we can do to prove it.
“At the beginning of a presidential candidacy, to be doing a valentine to one candidate, I just don’t think it’s a very smart thing to do,” said Oregon Public Broadcasting CEO Steve Bass.
As leaders retire, 2019 is a golden chance for the system to take giant steps in the right direction.
The effort will create “a national picture of the great work that public media is doing in education,” said Georgia Public Broadcasting’s Andrew MacCartney.
The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation announced Tuesday support for several journalism initiatives over the next five years.
The company has not signed on with Remote Audio Data, which can give podcast producers expanded analytics tracking their listeners’ habits.
The fund honors late WGBY host and producer Jim Madigan and hopes to build upon his legacy.
“Home Movies: American Journeys” is the first in a local slice-of-life series to experiment with viewer engagement.
“Since there are so many cuts proposed, it’s a bigger challenge to make our case than ever before,” said Alaska Public Broadcasting’s Mollie Kabler.
“We’re aiming to provide greater clarity to broadcast applicants and thus make the process easier for them, deliver more new services to the listening public, and reduce appeals of our comparative licensing decisions,” said FCC Chairman Ajit Pai.
More than 4,000 episodes of the show will be made available to the public over the next year.