Nice Above Fold - Page 400

  • CPB urges FCC to preserve public TV coverage in spectrum auction

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — CPB’s Board of Directors unanimously approved a resolution Thursday urging the FCC to avoid allowing “white areas” that would lack public television coverage after the upcoming spectrum auction and channel repacking. The resolution followed a meeting Tuesday in which network broadcasters and CPB management met with FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler to discuss the auction, set for mid-2015. It will clear bandwidth to be used by the burgeoning number of wireless devices. Television broadcasters face three choices: sell spectrum and get out of broadcasting, sell a portion of spectrum and share a channel with another broadcaster, or opt out of the auction.
  • Funding boost from universities helps Iowa Public Radio after difficult year

    Iowa’s Board of Regents voted to increase funding for Iowa Public Radio Thursday after hearing details of the pubcaster’s financial struggles in the wake of a CEO’s departure. The seven regents unanimously agreed to boost IPR’s fiscal year 2015 funding by $236,000. The decision restores support from the state universities to its FY2013 level of $944,800, almost a quarter of IPR’s total revenues that year. IPR, comprising six stations licensed to three public universities, has been adjusting to reduced subsidies from the schools, which have scaled back aid by 10 percent each year since 2011. IPR aims to be free of university funding in 2017.
  • Thursday roundup: Utah station threatened by CPB grant rules; Public Radio Capital rebrands

    Plus: PBS virtually recreates D-Day, and the latest on the fight over podcasting patents.
  • MinnPost, Voice of San Diego set high membership goals with support from Knight

    The two nonprofit newsrooms will split a $1.2 million grant from the foundation over two years.
  • Online companion to PBS series shines spotlight on civic innovation

    How We Got to Now, a fall PBS series charting the history of innovation, will accompany a stand-alone news and commentary website funded by the Knight Foundation.
  • NPR factors 'mixed response' from client stations into plans for Digital Services

    With contract negotiations looming this fall, leaders at NPR member stations are getting increasingly vocal about what they see as shortcomings of the products offered by NPR Digital Services. In 2011, NPR leaders convinced the majority of stations large and small to sign a three-year agreement for the newly formed unit to provide a fixed slate of tools and services for online streaming, website design and donation management. With the contract term ending Sept. 30, station leaders are raising questions and concerns about the offerings and whether to renew the contract as-is. A recent informal survey of heads of 30 stations gathered mixed reviews of the package of technology tools and services designed to help stations distribute and publish news reports and other online content.
  • Wednesday roundup: Supremes hear Aereo case; thoughts from Sagan's daughter

    Plus: Iowa Public Radio needs more funding, and regional Murrow Award winners are announced.
  • PBS's Sepulveda: Stations can do more to engage Latinos, broader communities

    PBS stations need to share more information among themselves as they work to increase their community impact, PBS’s new senior v.p. of station services Juan Sepulveda said at the two-day “Understanding Impact” symposium, convened by the Public Media Futures Forum and the Center for Investigative Reporting April 17 and 18. The forum, which took place at American University, explored how public media organizations can measure and analyze the impact of their work. Sepulveda, who started at PBS in January, said he was still trying to get a sense of how actively stations are working on issues of impact and how much information they’re sharing.
  • Tuesday roundup: Knight backs innovation site; Rockefeller receives journalists' award

    Plus: Tribeca panels become a WNYC offering.
  • Robert Knight, WBAI investigative journalist, dies at 64

    Knight was a Polk Award-winning investigative reporter for New York's Pacifica affiliate.
  • Monday roundup: NYC mayor taps POV's Lopez, controversial Rogers out at GPB

    • Cynthia Lopez, who has helped shape POV for the past 14 years as its executive vice president and co-executive producer, is the new commissioner of the New York City Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting. The agency markets the city as a prime location for production and assists production companies throughout the five boroughs. Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the appointment at a Friday afternoon press conference, calling Lopez “a remarkable media professional.” He noted that this is the first time the office will be led by a person of color and that Lopez has long been “a force for greater inclusion in this industry.”
  • PBS, NPR compete for Webby Awards in multiple categories

    Websites affiliated with PBS and NPR have been nominated for Webby Awards in more than 20 categories. PBS Video and NPR’s Responsive Design Project are contenders for top recognition for best practices on the Web, one of the most high-profile awards to be presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts & Sciences later this spring. PBS led public media organizations in garnering the most nominations. PBS Video received a nomination in the general website media streaming category, and The PBS Idea Channel is vying for two Webbys in categories for first-person online film and video and best web personality/host.
  • Bell exits NewsHour, Newman departs NPR, and more comings and goings in pubmedia

    Bell will manage public relations for US Pharmacopeia (USP) in Rockville, Md., a nonprofit that works with the Food and Drug Administration to set quality and safety standards for medicines and food.
  • Report: New light-rail line causing problems for MPR/APM

    The new Green Line of the Minneapolis-St. Paul light-rail line is beginning to wreak havoc on the studios of American Public Media/Minnesota Public Radio, according to an April 18 Minneapolis Star Tribune report. The new line, which passes in front of APM’s headquarters, starts operating June 16. Metro Transit has begun test runs on the line, and APM claims the shaking and vibrations are interfering with work at its offices. “The floor is vibrating, the ceiling is shaking, the structure is making noise, and that affects the recordings,” Nick Kereakos, chief technology officer and operations vice president for MPR and APM, told the Star Tribune.
  • Stirring musical piece blooms from Sendak's words on Fresh Air

    Author Maurice Sendak may be gone, but his final interview on public radio’s Fresh Air will live on through a unique choral composition.