Nice Above Fold - Page 562

  • Nonprofit news site Bay Citizen loses c.e.o, one month after editor's departure

    Lisa Frazier, c.e.o. of The Bay Citizen nonprofit news website, has announced that she is leaving for personal reasons. This follows Bay Citizen Editor Jonathan Weber’s departure in September to join Reuters. Frazier has led the news organization since its founding. Her appointment in January 2010 “raised eyebrows,” the San Francisco Business Times noted, “both for her lack of direct media experience and her salary of $400,000.”
  • Simeone to stay on as "World of Opera" host, WDAV to distribute show

    NPR is dropping distribution of World of Opera as of Nov. 11. The new distributor will be WDAV Classical Public Radio in Charlotte, N.C., and licensed to Davidson College. Lisa Simeone will continue as the show’s host, the licensee said. Simeone, a freelance radio broadcaster, was fired Oct. 19 from Soundprint, the independently produced long-form doc series, for violating NPR’s ethics code due to her role as spokesperson for “October 2011,” an anti-war group aligned with the Occupy Wall Street movement. Dana Davis Rehm, NPR’s s.v.p. for communications, said the change in distribution was made due to NPR and WDAV’s “different views about the role of a program host.”
  • Maine Public Broadcasting discontinues its on-air auction after four decades

    After 40 years, the Maine Public Broadcasting Network is ending its MPBN Great TV Auction, reports the Maine Sunday Telegram. Lou Morin, director of marketing and public relations for MPBN, said the auction usually brought in about $450,000 in gross revenue, but after expenses the net revenue was only about $150,000. The auction usually took place over 10 days in April, pre-empting the network’s regular nightly schedule — which became a factor in the decision to end it. “People want their normal programming interrupted as little as possible,” Morin said.
  • Knight report points to strategies for sustaining nonprofit news start-ups

    A new Knight Foundation report provides details on locally focused nonprofit news websites and their progress in engaging web audiences, building revenues and cultivating donors. “Getting Local” profiles seven news start-ups and draws conclusions about what it will take for them to become financially self-sustainable. Nonprofit news ventures must “aspire well beyond producing high-quality journalistic content,” write co-authors Mayur Patel and Michele McLellan. “Entrepreneurial revenue development, audience focus and a mission of engagement, and technology to support that mission are essential components of a sustainable nonprofit news venture.” Poynter columnist Rick Edmonds summarized highlights of the report in this Oct.
  • All the NETA excitement, now online

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Couldn’t attend the NETA conference this week? Here’s a handy recap in video, photos and reports.
  • Maine Public Broadcasting shatters one-day radio pledge record

    Maine Public Broadcasting Network’s “Super Thursday” one-day pledge drive raised $252,719 from 2,866 donors today (Oct. 20), more than doubling its previous daily record of $107,558 in April. Its goal was met in less than 12 hours of on-air appeals, which was “totally unexpected,” said Jennifer Foley, MPBN’s director of development and philanthropic giving, in a press release. One man walked into MPBN’s studio in Lewiston and donated a jar of loose change, which totaled $45.59. Foley said MPBN had heavily promoted the pledge drive for the past two weeks, with pre-recorded messages written for MPBN’s audience by a dozen NPR radio personalities, including Carl Kassel and Peter Sagal from Wait Wait … Don’t Tell Me!
  • NETA recognizes best of public TV with annual awards

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — First-time NETA Award winner KRSC/RSU-Television in Claremore, Okla., was also a double winner for its Will Rogers & American Politics, claiming both the biography and history honors in the content production category. The National Educational Telecommunications Association also pays tribute to the best of promotion, community engagement and instructional media with the annual awards, presented today (Oct. 20) at its national conference here. Another double winner was Mountain Lake PBS in Plattsburgh, N.Y., also in content production, for Cirque du Soleil: Flowers in the Desert (performance) and The Boobie Sisters (news and public affairs). The NETA Education Center presented its Enterprise and Innovation Award to WKYU in Bowling Green, Ky.
  • Simeone's activism prompts inquiry into ethical standards for pubradio freelancers

    Public radio is once again struggling to define the line between on-air talent who report as ethically bound journalists and those personalities who are permitted to express opinions. Freelance radio broadcaster Lisa Simeone, a veteran host of public radio documentary and music programs, was fired late Oct. 19 from Soundprint, the independently produced long-form doc series, for violating NPR’s ethics code. Her role as spokesperson for “October 2011,” an anti-war group aligned with the Occupy Wall Street movement that has staged protests in Washington, D.C., put her longtime affiliation with public radio in jeopardy. The Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call first questioned whether Simeone’s activism violated journalistic ethics in an Oct.
  • PBS Food opens its online doors; PBS Distribution expands deal with Amazon.com

    PBS today announced two online initiatives, one a new website, another an expanded content agreement with Amazon.com. It’s launch day for PBS Food, a gateway to some 150 pubTV food and cooking programs and more than 1,700 searchable recipes from local station and national archives. The site features classic episodes of shows such as Baking With Julia, and Victory Garden, and an appearance from a very young Emeril Lagasse. And PBS Distribution has broadened its licensing agreement with Amazon.com, which will allow Amazon Prime members to instantly stream current and archived PBS programming. “Expanding the reach of our content by making it accessible through digital platforms is a key priority for PBS,” Jason Seiken, s.v.p.,
  • WTTW adding Al Jazeera English content

    WTTW is picking up Al Jazeera English programming beginning Oct. 31, the first time the news provider will be seen on the air in Chicago. AJE will run from 6:30 to 7 a.m. and 11 to 11:30 p.m. weekdays on the WTTW Prime multicast channel, and 5:30 to 6:30 a.m. Saturdays on its main Channel 11. Additional time slots for AJE on WTTW11 will be available beginning in early 2012, WTTW said. “Our station has a long history of providing quality public affairs programming,” said Dan Schmidt, WTTW president, “and by adding broadcasts from Al Jazeera English, we are providing a broader perspective on critical global issues.”
  • First pledge drive for Pittsburgh's WESA seen as key indicator of listener support

    Pittsburgh’s WESA is making its first fundraising appeal to listeners since the station changed format and call letters under new owner Essential Public Media. Its $250,000 fundraising goal is less than half of the amount raised in a record-breaking February 2010 drive for WDUQ, as the station was known during its years as a split-format news and jazz station, the Pittsburgh Tribune reports. But back then, listeners who pledged a total of $525,000 were responding to Duquesne University’s decision to sell its public radio station, a transaction that finally closed this summer. After the switch to its all-news format in July, the audience for 90.5 dipped to a 1.4 share of Pittsburgh radio listeners, according to Arbitron data cited by the Tribune.
  • "Antiques Roadshow" companion program coming in spring 2012

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Public TV broadcasters got some tantalizing details on the long-awaited spinoff of the hit Antiques Roadshow. John Wilson, PBS program chief, said the program, with the working title of Market Wars, will debut in spring 2012 from Roadshow e.p. Marsha Bemko. Wilson said PBS has ordered 20 episodes initially, “at a very effective production cost per hour.” In the show, two rotating expert appraisers will drop into a community for a friendly competition: Each begins with a set amount of money, hits flea markets and auctions to find interesting objects, and the one with the best net wins.
  • Butler at NETA: Federal pubcasting funding a lifeline, not a yoke

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Butler, president of the Association of Public Television Stations, told attendees at the National Educational Telecommunications Association conference this morning (Oct. 19) that he doesn’t want the public to get the impression that “public broadcasters are eager for the day when federal funding will go away.” He was reacting to a question from the breakfast crowd about Louisville Public Media’s “Campaign for Independence” radio pledge drive, going on now, that aims, according to its website, to help the station “become independent from unreliable funding streams.” “This attitude is not really helpful to us,” Butler said.
  • City leaders look for new financial lifeline for Salt Lake's KCPW

    There’s been another setback for KCPW in Salt Lake City, the NPR News station that’s struggling to pay off a $250,000 private loan from National Cooperative Bank by Oct. 31. The Salt Lake City Council authorized the city’s redevelopment agency last week to provide a six-month loan to help the station meet the payment, but the loan offer has been withdrawn, according to the City Weekly. “Lawyers for the RDA say they did not have the authority to make the loan as they originally had thought, and the city is now pursuing other avenues to help the station,” reports Bryan Schott, former KCPW news director.
  • Los Angeles Press Club Awards, 2011

    KPCC’s Susan Valot and KCRW’s Kim Masters were recognized among best journalists in Los Angeles. Valot, a reporter who covers Orange County for Pasadena’s KPCC, was lauded by Press Club judges for producing “well-rounded reports with an authoritative, informed tone” and making great use of sound. Masters, a former NPR correspondent who now covers Hollywood for KCRW in Santa Monica, was named top entertainment journalist. Judges cited her voicing and thorough, substantive reporting on L.A.’s entertainment business. KPCC’s newsroom won top recognition in four categories of the radio division: for feature reporting by Madeleine Brand and Kristen Muller; entertainment reporting/criticism by Larry Mantle; use of sound by Kevin Ferguson; and the talk/public affairs program Airtalk with Larry Mantle.