Nice Above Fold - Page 518
FCC okays framework for channel-sharing after spectrum auction
The FCC on Friday (April 27) unanimously adopted the basic regulatory framework for broadcast channel-sharing after the auction to free up bandwidth for mobile devices, reports Broadcasting & Cable. Any channel sharing will be voluntary and flexible; stations may decide how to divide a shared 6-MHz channel, as long as each delivers at least one standard-definition digital primary channel. Each primary channel will be subject to all FCC obligations and must-carry rights. Under spectrum auction legislation approved earlier this year, a broadcaster may opt to give up entirely its license to broadcast on a TV channel of 6 MHz, keep only part of its 6-MHz channel and share the rest with another station, or swap its UHF channel for a VHF channel (Current, Feb.'Permanent beta' a new programming approach for NPR
NPR lately has been using a more nimble and less expensive way of developing content — a kind of “permanent beta” — notes Nieman Journalism Lab. New offerings such as TED Radio Hour, Ask Me Another and Cabinet of Wonders are relatively inexpensive live shows or adaptations of existing titles, and run as pilot projects. That’s different from, say, Bryant Park Project, launched five years ago on a budget of $2 million after extended online piloting (Current, Sept. 24, 2007); that died within a year (Current, July 28, 2008). “Historically,” Eric Nuzum, NPR’s v.p.Oklahoma Network gets state funding for two more years
The Oklahoma Senate this week approved funding the Oklahoma Educational Television Authority for at least two more years, reports the Tulsa World newspaper. The House must approve the measure. “I think at this point, since this is the last few hours this could have been considered, I think this was a win for OETA and that we are going to be extended two more years,” said OETA Executive Director John McCarroll. “Had this not occurred, the way I understand the law, it truly would have ended on June 30 of this year. This gives us another two years to exist.”
WFUV's Pete Fornatale dies following stroke
WFUV-FM is reporting that host Pete Fornatale, who got his start at the Fordham University pubstation as an undergrad in 1964 and went on to become an influential progressive-rock disc jockey in New York City, has died following a stroke. He was 66. “This is a devastating loss, not just for his family, friends, and colleagues at WFUV, but for radio listeners everywhere,” Chuck Singleton, interim general manager of WFUV, said in a statement. “Pete was a beloved air personality for four decades and a master communicator. His influence as a pioneer of progressive FM radio is almost incalculable.” He began his professional career in 1969 at WNEW-FM, where he established his weekly eclectic Mixed Bag show in 1982.Autism treatment grew into passion for classical music for young pubradio host
The host of the Josh’s Corner weekly classical podcast for WBOI-FM in Fort Wayne, Ind., may be unique within the pubradio system: In addition to being just 16 years old, Joshua Stephenson is also on the autism spectrum, reports the local Journal Gazette. When Joshua was 6, to treat his sensitivity to sound, his parents turned to audio therapy, using headphones that emphasized high and low pitches. Joshua learned to tolerate noise through classical music — and developed a love for the genre. Will Murphy, general manager of Northeast Indiana Public Radio, said that given that passion, Joshua might have a career in radio.FCC asks for input on allowing third-party fundraising on noncom stations
As anticipated, the FCC today (April 26) invited public comment on allowing noncommercial educational (NCE) broadcasters to spend a small percentage of their total annual broadcast time to conduct on-air fundraising activities for other nonprofits. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is asking for input on whether the ban on third-party fundraising remains necessary to preserve the noncommercial nature of NCE stations; if there should be limitations on the stations that engage in the third-party fundraising; whether fundraising should not exceed 1 percent (about 88 hours) of a broadcaster’s total annual airtime; if there should be a durational limit on each specific fundraising program; if participating stations should submit annual reports to the FCC on their fundraising activities and, if so, what information; and whether participating stations should be required to certify in renewal applications that they have complied with any limits on third-party fundraising.
House members establish Federal Spectrum Working Group, in anticipation of auctions
U.S. House Communications and Technology Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.) and Ranking Member Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) have launched a bipartisan Federal Spectrum Working Group to examine how the federal government can use the nation’s airwaves more efficiently, the two announced Wednesday (April 25). Walden said the group will “take a comprehensive, thoughtful, and responsible look at how to improve federal spectrum use as part of our ongoing effort to make the most efficient and effective use of the public’s airwaves.” In February, Congress gave the FCC authority to conduct broadcast spectrum auctions to free up bandwidth for mobile devices (Current, Feb.Longtime visual journalist joins 'PBS NewsHour' as multimedia managing editor
PBS NewsHour has hired visual journalist Tom Kennedy, formerly of WashingtonPost.com and the National Geographic Society, as its managing editor for multimedia. Kennedy currently teaches in the multimedia, photography and design department at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. In more than 35 years in print and online journalism, he has created, directed and edited projects that have earned Pulitzers, Emmys, Peabodys and Edward R. Murrow awards. At the NewsHour, Kennedy will be responsible for the program’s online content strategy and digital operation. He was managing editor for multimedia at WashingtonPost.com, developing its multimedia section and creating the first documentary video team for an American newspaper-based website.Station programmer asks CPB ombudsman to address Dyer pledge content
The issue of spirituality in motivational speaker Wayne Dyer’s pledge programming has resurfaced in the latest CPB ombudsman’s column, after the PBS ombudsman, Michael Getler, addressed the topic earlier this month. Getler wrote that he “sensed” that Dyer’s programs violate PBS’s Editorial Standards and Policies to provide “nonsectarian” content. Aaron Pruitt, director of content at Montana PBS, wrote to Joel Kaplan, CPB ombudsman, to express concern over the lack of discussion of Dyer’s content among pubcasting programmers or development staffers. “I have been working in public television now for nearly 18 years,” Pruitt writes. “The silence regarding this topic, in these otherwise lively discussion groups, is deafening.Chicago Public Media picks up former Sun-Times journalist as blogger
WBEZ in Chicago has hired veteran newsman Zay N. Smith as a blogger, according to Bob Feder’s media column in Time Out Chicago. Smith “was a popular fixture” in the Sun-Times for 13 years, Feder notes, with his Quick Takes column, “a collection of quirky news items, political punditry and random observations.” Beginning May 7, that column will appear three times a week on Chicago Public Media’s website.The Sun-Times discontinued Quick Takes in 2008, and Smith resigned a year later. Coincidentally, in one of Smith’s Quick Takes columns seven years ago he admitted he had “no idea” what a blog was.Third-party fundraising on noncoms now off agenda for this week's FCC meeting
The FCC has dropped an agenda item on noncom on-air fundraising from its April 27 public meeting, “which more than likely means it will be voted and approved before the meeting,” reports Broadcasting & Cable. The item had been a notice of proposed rulemaking inviting public comment on allowing non-CPB grantees “to conduct on-air fundraising activities that interrupt regular programming for the benefit of third-party nonprofit organizations.” The National Religious Broadcasters have sought more latitude in on-air fundraising for other nonprofits, B&C notes. The item proposed allowing noncom stations to use 1 percent of annual airtime for those activities.This Saturday's webcast on public TV local production
The year’s second Public Media Futures forum, on public TV strategies in local production, will be webcast live Saturday, April 28, from Los Angeles. To connect, go to the website communicationleadership.usc.edu, from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Pacific time (12:30 to 4:30 Eastern time). Submit questions here. Tentative start times of the three sessions: 9:45 a.m. Pacific / 12:45 p.m. Eastern: Nashville Public Television, a former school-board dependent whose local programs now outdraw the PBS schedule. 10:45 a.m. Pacific / 1:45 Eastern: San Diego’s KPBS, a “fully converged” FM/TV operator that recently launched a half-hour nightly news show. 12:15 p.m."Women, War and Peace," NPR, ProPublica win Overseas Press Club honors
WNET has claimed two Overseas Press Club awards, among several awarded to public media news organizations. The New York City station won both the Edward R. Murrow Award for best TV doc on international affairs, and the Robert Spiers Benjamin Award for best Latin American reporting, for Women, War and Peace, a five-part series produced by Fork Films. The Lowell Thomas Award for best radio news of international affairs went to NPR for its coverage of the Arab Spring. And the best online investigation of an international issue or event was awarded to a collaboration between ProPublica and The Financial Times, “Tax Wars: A Cross-Border Battle Worth Billions.”Five words may sway women donors, academic researcher finds
An academic specializing in philanthropic psychology working with WFIU in Bloomington, Ind., has discovered that five words appear to boost contributions among female donors. In a Chronicle of Philanthropy podcast, Jen Shang, assistant professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs of Indiana University, said volunteers during a WFIU pledge drive were instructed to use one of five words when initially thanking donors for calling in to the station: caring, compassionate, helpful, friendly or kind. Shang said women donors who heard one of those words went on to give an average of $100, compared with women who heard simply “thank you,” who gave an average of $83.All choral, all the time: MPR launches 24/7 choral stream
Banking on the strong Minnesotan tradition of choral music, Minnesota Public Radio is now offering a public-media first: a web stream of programmed choral music around the clock. The 24/7 stream features professional, college and church choirs singing pieces “from Palestrina to Pärt, spirituals to Schubert.” A major element is the inclusion of Minnesota’s sizable local choral talent, including ensembles such as VocalEssence, Cantus, The Singers, St. Olaf Choir, Choral Arts Ensemble and the National Lutheran Choir. The stream is part of a larger initiative by Classical MPR to boost choral music. June 7 will be the first annual “Harmony In The Park” — a free outdoor choral festival at Minneapolis’ Minnehaha Park — and MPR will bring the world-famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir to the city’s 20,000-seat Target Center in June 2013.
Featured Jobs