Nice Above Fold - Page 424

  • Foundation to sell 87-year old commercial classical radio station

    KDB in Santa Barbara, Calif., one of the few remaining commercial classical radio stations, has been put up for sale by the foundation that has been operating it at six-figure losses for several years. Directors of the Santa Barbara Foundation, which has owned the license to broadcast on 93.7 FM for the past decade,  voted unanimously to sell the station, according to the Santa Barbara Independent. The station broadcasts on a commercial frequency, but the foundation opted to retain Public Radio Capital, which specializes in signal expansion for noncommercial public radio stations, to broker the sale. “As much as we love KDB, it isn’t our core mission,” said Ron Gallo, foundation c.e.o.,
  • Suarez says he left NewsHour due to his diminished role

    Newsman Ray Suarez, who exited PBS NewsHour after 14 years last week, tells Fox News Latino that he resigned because his contributions to the program had been minimized over the years. “I felt like I didn’t have much of a future with the broadcast,” Suarez said. “[They] didn’t have much of a plan for me.” Suarez told Fox that his profile on the broadcasting network was so diminished that people on social media were asking what he had been doing since working at NewsHour, assuming that he had already departed.
  • Morgese accepts GM post at KUED-TV

    Veteran pubcaster James Morgese will take over  Dec. 1 as GM of KUED-TV in Salt Lake City. Morgese has more than 30 years of experience in public broadcasting management, programming, production, engineering, development and community outreach. In October 2012 he signed on as g.m. of dual licensee WKYU in Bowling Green, Ky. Previously he worked at Rocky Mountain PBS in Denver, Idaho Public Television and WUFT in Gainesville, Fla. He also served as executive director of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra in Punta Gorda, Fla. In the past, Morgese has served on the boards of the Association of Public Television Stations, the Pacific Mountain Network and the National Educational Television Association.
  • NewsHour audience falls 48 percent over last eight years

    Baltimore Sun Television Critic David Zurawik reports that PBS NewsHour has lost 48 percent of its audience over the last eight years. NewsHour‘s average audience, the number of people watching at any given minute in a program, is 950,000. “I firmly believe this nation needs at least one non-commercial, national news broadcast,” Zurawik writes. “It is important to democracy. But it is long past time to ask some hard questions about this one. I think it is reasonable to ask whether NewsHour is actually a national broadcast any more with these audience numbers.”
  • NPR's Jean Cochran takes voluntary buyout

    Newscaster Jean Cochran, the longest-serving member of NPR’s newscast unit, announced today that she has accepted a voluntary buyout offer from the network and will be leaving. Cochran made the announcement via Twitter this morning: “It’s official: I’ve accepted NPR’s generous Buyout. Leaving at the end of the year. Anyone need a newscast,I do birthdays, and bar mitzvahs! The buyouts are part of NPR’s plan to balance its budget before fiscal year 2015. It aims to reduce staff by 10 percent to help reach that goal. Cochran started at NPR in 1981 and joined the newly formed Newscast Unit in 1989.
  • Walter Sheppard, former grant officer for PTFP, dies at 82

    Walter Sheppard, a veteran public radio general manager who worked for the federal government’s Public Telecommunications Facilities Program for more than two decades as a federal program officer, died Oct. 19 at the age of 82. Over the course of Sheppard’s career, which began in 1947, he held roles at several public radio stations across the country, including WITF in Harrisburg, Penn.; Boston’s WBUR; and the West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority (today known as West Virginia Public Broadcasting), where he served as deputy director in the 1980s and added more radio stations to the network. He joined the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in 1990 to manage grant portfolios as part of PTFP.
  • Start the presses: WHYY releases "print edition" of NewsWorks web site

    To promote its online local news platform NewsWorks, Philadelphia’s WHYY developed an unconventional campaign mimicking over-the-top advertising techniques and the limitations of news published in print. A team of designers and editors created a “print edition” of the online news site and used various tactics to distribute more than 36,000 copies to Philadelphia residents.  Beginning Oct. 22 commuters could pick up copies as a handout offered at public transit stations and temporary newsstands. In addition, residents of some neighborhoods received copies that were delivered to their doorsteps. The eight-page newspaper featured snippets from NewsWorks articles and cost about $14,700 to produce and distribute.
  • Focus on anti-terrorism becomes 'life-changing' story for filmmaker Poitras

    After plumbing the global repercussions of America’s war against terrorism, documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras helped expose how that war has stripped away the privacy of U.S. citizens.
  • CPM employees take union request to labor relations board

    Editorial employees at Chicago Public Media filed a petition to unionize with the National Labor Relations Board Oct 18 after earlier efforts to gain recognition from management were rebuffed. Nearly 80 percent of the 54 employees who work at CPM as on-air talent, producers, web staff, reporters, editors and production assistants support the petition, according to a statement provided by the employees. The group initially notified interim CEO Alison Scholly of their request for union recognition Sept. 25. That request was rejected Oct. 1, according to the new petition. The organizers turned to a neutral third party to make another bid for recognition Oct.
  • Former NPR head Vivian Schiller joining Twitter as head of news partnerships

    Vivian Schiller, NPR president from 2009 to 2011, will join Twitter as head of its newly created News Partnerships division. Schiller, who announced the job change Oct. 24, steps down as chief digital officer for NBC News to join the social media network. At Twitter, she will cultivate and oversee partnerships with established news outlets, including NPR, according to the New York Times. During her short tenure at NPR, Schiller played a key role in developing grant-funded projects and services that accelerated public radio’s capacity to deliver news coverage online. But Schiller’s presidency was ultimately marred by her role in the controversial 2010 firing of commentator Juan Williams and the political firestorm that later engulfed the network.
  • PBS Station Services chief to exit next week

    Joyce Herring, s.v.p. of station services for PBS, is leaving the network Oct. 31, President Paula Kerger announced today in an email to station executives. Kerger attributed Herring’s departure “to a series of unexpected circumstances requiring her immediate attention.” Herring, who joined PBS in 2007, is the third senior executive to depart in the past month. John McCoskey, the network’s top engineer, recently left to join the Motion Picture Association of America; Jason Seiken, head of digital media, took a position with the Telegraph Media Group in London. As head of station services, Herring’s main responsibility has been ensuring that the interests of member stations are represented in decisions regarding PBS’s management and strategic direction.
  • With Sparticl, TPT hopes to make STEM learning fun

    Twin Cities Public Television launched Sparticl, a new STEM-focused sharing website geared toward middle-school students, Oct. 1 with support from a major corporate sponsor. Manufacturing company 3M backed more than two years of research and development of the site prior to its launch early this month. Sparticl curates links to articles, videos and games built around Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics–related themes, ranging from the environment to nutrition to outer space. Links are geared toward an audience of seventh- through ninth-graders. “Some of our executives noticed that it’s really hard to find good science content for kids, in particular on the web,” said Richard Hudson, TPT’s director of science production.
  • WVPT-TV in Harrisonburg, Va., sells headquarters it has used since 1968

    WVPT-TV has struck a deal to sell the building it has used as its headquarters since 1968 and move to a larger facility in Harrisonburg, Va. The station currently owns its building on the James Madison University campus in Harrisonburg but leases the land from the university. In the $2.35 million deal, the university will purchase the building. WVPT President David Mullins told Current that the station hopes to complete the move by April 30, 2014. “We have been actively searching for the best facility to renovate and lease,” Mullins said. “We should have this determined by the end of the year.”
  • Nashville PTV takes on end-of-life challenges in multiyear project

    Nashville Public Television is tackling the complex issues surrounding aging and death in an “NPT Reports” multiplatform project, “Aging Matters: End of Life,” reports the local Tennessean newspaper. For the next three to five years, NPT will produce at least six documentaries and interstitials, air town halls and panel discussions, host a website and distribute DVDs. The first documentary, “End of Life,” premiered in September, with Grammy winner Kathy Mattea. “My own dad just died in hospice care three years ago,” Beth Curley, NPT president, told the newspaper. “That’s very personal, and many in the baby boomer generation have similar stories.
  • Ken Rudin offers public radio a new weekly dose of "Political Junkie"

    The demise of NPR’s Talk of the Nation ended Ken Rudin’s regular appearances on many public radio stations, but the “Political Junkie” is aiming to reengage his devoted audience with a weekly radio segment that launched yesterday. The 8-minute Political Junkie segments, distributed by Public Radio Exchange, reprise many of the features Rudin wove into his TOTN appearances. The first installment features Rudin and NPR Senior Political Editor Ron Elving discussing the aftermath of the government shutdown. Rudin also plans to offer Political Junkie in extended form as a podcast. Since TOTN wound down in June and Rudin departed from NPR, thousands of listeners emailed the commentator to ask for his return to the Web and to radio.