Nice Above Fold - Page 475

  • Harvard and Stanford business schools among partners on NBR-U

    Nightly Business Report has entered a content partnership with several top business schools for its new NBR-U initiative. The Miami-based weeknight financial program is working with Harvard Business School, Stanford Graduate School of Business, University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and Vanderbilt University for online and broadcast pieces. Articles supplied by the partners will run on the NBR-U website, and professors will appear in video segments each Monday. Tom Hudson, NBR’s managing editor and co-anchor, said the video reports and articles will “provide the depth that leads to real understanding, without hype and conjecture.”
  • Sesame Workshop examines possible unlicensed North Korean knock-off toys

    Sesame Workshop voiced concern Wednesday after a North Korean government-owned trade publication highlighting a toy company’s apparent offerings came to light that appear to include unlicensed Sesame Street characters. The photos appeared in the latest issue of Foreign Trade of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, a quarterly publication highlighting manufacturers of products ranging from plush toys and “Gold Liquor” to “cornhusk shoes.” On page 13 of the publication is a profile of Kyonghung Trading Corp., a 7-year-old manufacturer of plush toys, some bearing the likenesses of Cookie Monster, Big Bird and Elmo. In an email to Voice of America, which ran the story, Sesame Workshop said “we believe the toys pictured are unauthorized.”
  • Nominees for documentary feature Oscar include two films on PBS

    Two documentaries on PBS received Academy Award nominations at the 5:30 a.m. Pacific announcement today from Los Angeles. Honored in the documentary feature category were The Invisible War, an examination of rape of soldiers within the U.S. military, on Independent Lens; and 5 Broken Cameras, which looks at the reaction of one village to a separation barrier, on P.O.V.  Winners will be announced during the live Oscar telecast on Feb. 24.
  • PRI hires Kathy Merritt as v.p., content strategy and development

    Kathy Merritt, senior director of radio program investments at CPB, has accepted a position as vice president, content strategy and development at Public Radio International. Merritt will identify new talent, production and business partners, and work with producers on content development, audience research and new business opportunities, the Minneapolis-based PRI said in today’s announcement. She will report to Chief Content Officer Melinda Ward. “Kathy’s wide range of experience in public broadcasting,” Ward said, “including leadership positions at stations, industry associations like SRG [Station Resource Group] and Public Radio News Directors Association, and her most recent tenure at CPB, uniquely qualify her for her role in developing PRI’s content strategy, working with producers and ensuring that our content meets station and digital needs.”
  • Larry McDaniel, WDET-FM's 'Arkansas Traveler,' dies at 72

    Larry McDaniel, known for decades on public radio in Detroit as “The Arkansas Traveler,” died Jan. 4 after a lengthy illness, reports the Detroit News. He was 72. He was a fixture on WDET-FM from 1977 to 2009, with his bluegrass show that was part of a block of American roots music on Saturdays. A 2002 press release marking the program”s 25th anniversary noted it was one of the station’s most popular offerings, and one of the longest-running bluegrass shows in the country. “Larry was such an amazing host,” former WDET host Matt Watroba, now on WKSU in Kent, Ohio, told the newspaper.
  • WGBY interviews real-life Downton Abbey Countess

    Three nights after 7.9 million people tuned into the third-season premiere of PBS’s Downton Abbey, WGBY in Springfield, Mass., will broadcast an interview tonight with Lady Carnarvon of Highclere Castle, the filming location of the BBC-produced series. The interview is being shown as an episode of the program Connecting Point and is not available for national carriage, so only those New Englanders lucky enough to receive the WGBY signal will be able to watch this evening. “I got in touch with Lady Carnarvon’s personal assistant last fall for a different reason,” WGBY spokesperson Myrna Flynn told Current regarding how the station landed the exclusive. 
  • Robert Bednarek dies; was deputy chief scientist at CPB

    Robert Bednarek, a technology expert at CPB in the early 1980s, has died at age 55 after a battle with cancer, reports Space Policy Online. Bednarek was CPB’s deputy chief scientist. SatNews, which covers the satellite industry, said that while at CPB, he “managed the research, development and application of new telecommunications and information technologies.”  Following his tenure at CPB, Bednarek founded a D.C.-based technology consulting firm, Rubin, Bednarek and Associates, and then joined PanAmSat (now Intelsat) as chief technology officer, overseeing operation of its fleet of communications satellites. From there he joined Dutch satellite operator SES, rising to president and c.e.o.
  • New York's WQXR offers weekly opera show starting Jan. 19

    New York Public Radio will launch an opera-focused radio show Jan. 19 on WQXR, its classical station in New York City, and also make the program available nationwide. Operavore will cover opera news, preview new recordings and feature interviews with opera personalities as well as playwright Terrance McNally, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and TV and theater star Tyne Daly. The show will be hosted by WQXR’s Naomi Lewin and will feature mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne as a weekly guest. Operavore expands on a WQXR website and all-opera web stream of the same name that launched a year ago. It will air weekly until May 25.
  • Aereo, target of lawsuits by broadcasters, to expand nationwide

    Aereo, the digital television distributor that grabs and streams over-the-air signals to web-enabled devices, is expanding nationwide, reports Hollywood Reporter. The new technology, backed at its New York City launch in March 2012 by broadcasting giant Barry Diller, has obtained an additional $38 million to spread service to 22 more cities. It says it uses “proprietary remote antenna and DVR” technology to enable subscribers, for a monthly fee, to watch over-the-air broadcasts on their smart phones, tablets and computers. PBS and WNET are among broadcasters with pending copyright infringement lawsuits against Aereo, saying that the company doesn’t have the right to sell access to their over-the-air content.
  • Downton Abbey premiere spikes PBS ratings

    The Masterpiece Classic Season 3 premiere of Downton Abbey drew nearly 8 million viewers, a 5.1 household rating, almost doubling those numbers for the first episode of Season 2, according to PBS and Nielsen. The 7.9 million fans just about quadrupled PBS’s average primetime rating. From 9 to 11 p.m. Eastern on Sunday, PBS was the second-most watched network, behind only CBS. Local numbers were also strong: Seattle’s KCTS saw a 9.5; WGBH in Boston, 8.7; KLRU in Austin, Texas, 8.0; and New York’s WNET, 8.0.
  • Huell Howser, longtime host of California's Gold, dies at 67

    One of pubTV's most beloved and good-natured personalities, Huell Howser, passed away Jan. 6 of natural causes.
  • PBS inks deals for on-demand access to local station content

    PBS unveiled deals to distribute public TV programs on two additional on-demand video streaming platforms — Roku and Xbox Live. The contracts, unveiled last week by PBS Digital chief Jason Seiken, lay the groundwork for apps that will feature local station programming and a limited selection of national content. To gain access, Xbox and Roku users will provide email addresses and choose their local station. The graphic interface on both services will be cobranded with PBS and local station logos. “Xbox and Roku are leaders in the fast-growing ‘over-the-top’ television phenomenon, in which viewers access television programs on-demand on their TV sets using an Internet connection,” Seiken wrote in Jan.
  • Four candidates vying for director's job at Quad Cities PubTV in Illinois

    Western Illinois University in Macomb has announced the four candidates for director of its WQPT-TV, Quad Cities Public Television. Interviewing for the position are Victor Hogstrom, executive director and general manager of the Utah Public Radio Network; Mary Pruess, former president and general manager of WNIT, South Bend, Ind.; Sharon McNeal, former coordinator of communication and marketing at Pinellas (Fla.) County Schools; and Andrew Chalanick, director of programming at WDSC-TV, Daytona Beach, Fla. Interviews should be concluded by the end of the month.
  • Philadelphia's WXPN converts alt-rock stream to singer-songwriter format

    Philadelphia’s WXPN-FM has converted a long-running alternative-rock stream into XPN2 Singer-Songwriter Radio, the broadcaster announced last week. The new stream, which can be heard online and as an HD Radio channel in the Philadelphia area, highlights music by performers “rooted in the singer-songwriter tradition,” the station said in a press release. The stream had launched in 2006 as Y-Rock on XPN, a reincarnation of alternative rock station Y100. That former FM station went online-only in 2005 after falling victim to a format change. It then adopted XPN’s brand. In 2011 WXPN rebranded the stream as XPN2. The new Singer-Songwriter Radio features in-studio performances and an additional broadcast of WXPN’s World Café, as well as Mountain Stage and four hours of music from Folk Alley, a web stream programmed by WKSU in Kent, Ohio.
  • Edwardian-themed screenings provide jolly good show for Downton fans

    To whet local viewers’ appetites for the return of the megahit British drama Downton Abbey this Sunday, more than 100 pubcasting stations across the country have organized lively events evoking Edwardian England, the period in which the Masterpiece Classics series is set.