Nice Above Fold - Page 630

  • "Waste Land" gets Oscar nod

    The ITVS-supported doc “Waste Land,” by Lucy Walker and Angus Aynsley, scored an Academy Award nomination today (Jan. 25) for feature documentary. Last month it received the International Documentary Association Pare Lorentz Award at the IDI Documentary Awards ceremonies. A full list of nominees here.
  • Steve Miller band, downtown party to open new Austin City Limits venue

    KLRU is inaugurating its new Austin City Limits theater with a big bash on Feb. 26 in Austin’s 2nd Street District. The 2nd St. Soundcheck event will culminate with the first ACL taping in its new, $2.5 million Moody Theater, named for the Moody Foundation backer of the massive project. First up: A 90-minute performance by the Steve Miller Band.
  • It's half a century on the air for Eight/Arizona PBS

    Eight/Arizona PBS is celebrating its 50th anniversary of going live on Jan. 30, 1961; by 1964 it had its first Emmy Award for 400 hours of local programming. Viewers are sharing their memories of the station, and there’s a cool retro video that includes its first moments of broadcast. Is your station or network marking an important anniversary this year? Let us know!
  • KCET continues ratings slide – except for British programming block

    Although it’s mainly bad news for KCET in its latest ratings, there is one bright spot: Ratings for its Saturday block of British faves such as MI-5 and Keeping Up Appearances are up 33 percent over this time last year, the Los Angeles Times reports. Overall, the first three weeks of its independence from PBS show a 38 percent plunge. Over its entire broadcast day, KCET lost half its viewers compared with last year. The station now averages 10,000 households a day, “a figure that suggests the station’s potential donor pool will be considerably reduced,” the paper notes.
  • Weekend breaking news coverage would need a "NewsHour approach," Lehrer says

    In an interview with Baltimore Sun TV columnist David Zurawik, PBS NewsHour anchor Jim Lehrer said although it would be “possible” to cover breaking news on the weekends, “we just don’t have the resources right now.” Lehrer also noted: “… We’ve got to keep in mind, it’s got to be more than just the headlines. The headlines are already available in other places. We’ve got to take a NewsHour approach on Saturday and Sunday, just like we do Monday through Friday, or it is not working.” And, once again, Lehrer addressed his inevitable retirement. “Well, as you know I have stepped back a little, and I am going to continue to do that,” he said.
  • Marcotte weighs in on editorial integrity of university-owned pubradio stations

    Public radio news veteran Michael Marcotte acknowledges feeling conflicted by the proposal by Minnesota Public Radio founder Bill Kling to cut institutional ties between universities and public radio stations. As a former news director, reporter, anchor for more than one university-owned NPR outlet, Marcotte writes in a blog post that he understands the simplicity of Kling’s argument – “Universities have different missions than public radio stations, so their goals clash.” “I have spent many an hour working on heat-shield policies, ethics statements, codes of editorial independence, etc. toward fortifying journalism at university licensees. This is because Kling’s point has its basis and I’ve [known] many news directors who needed back-up.
  • Cutting NPR's funding won't eliminate the deficit, Powell says

    During an appearance on CNN’s State of the Union yesterday, former Secretary of State Colin Powell dismissed congressional Republicans’ proposal to cut the deficit by defunding public broadcasting. Congress won’t be able to balance the budget without going after the “real money” that’s spent on entitlement programs like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, Powell told host Candy Crowley. “You can’t fix the deficit or the national debt by killing NPR or National Endowment for the Humanities or the Arts. Nice political chatter, but that doesn’t do it. And I’m very put off when people just say let’s go back and freeze to the level two years ago…..That
  • Cable glitch drops KCET from some Time Warner viewers

    KCET continues to weather challenges following its departure from the PBS system on Jan. 1. The latest is a cable glitch, according to the Los Angeles Times. Time Warner was supposed to convert KCET to an all-digital signal last week, according to station programming chief Mare Mazur. The switch “should not have affected any subscribers with digital boxes, which according to Time Warner represents about 90 percent of their customers,” Mazur said. But  KCET received complaints from viewers. The outlet has since been working with Time Warner to try to resolve the situation. The LA Times could not reach a representative for Time Warner Cable for comment.
  • With $6.75 million purchases, WNKU triples its reach

    The station is buying two country-music outlets in southern Ohio.
  • In Pittsburgh, a broker turns operator

    News/jazz WDUQ-FM will be sold to a joint partnership between another Pittsburgh pubradio station, WYEP, and a new local nonprofit established by Public Radio Capital. Left out of the sale are Scott Hanley, g.m. of WDUQ, and his staff and supporters, who mounted a bid to preserve jazz music programming. Their aspirations conflicted with those of local funders who pushed for greater emphasis on news. The $6 million deal, announced Jan. 14, opens a new chapter for WDUQ, established by Duquesne University in 1937 and put up for sale a year ago. It also introduces a new playbook for Colorado-based Public Radio Capital, created a decade ago to expand the public radio family.
  • Burns calls pubcasting "a dividend we can't do without"

    In an interview with John Diaz, editorial page editor of the San Francisco Chronicle, PBS documentarian Ken Burns says: “I think we ought to just take pause and reflect on what this extra-marketplace programming means to us.” He also points out that the relatively small investment in public broadcasting produces “a dividend we can’t do without, especially in this commercial era.” Diaz agrees, noting in the column today (Jan. 23) that “Americans who want a depth of programming that doesn’t necessarily produce celebrity hosts or big ratings or high profits will now have to fight to keep Congress from cutting off funds to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.”
  • The Hub seeks university-linked news orgs

    The Nonprofit Journalism Hub, a recent project of the Voice of San Diego, is looking for nonprof university-sponsored news organizations for its growing list. It’s aiming to “bring together myriad resources to help communities create their own successful nonprofit news organizations.” Interested? Submit your organization for inclusion here.
  • ivi TV loses first round in battle over TV signals – including public broadcasters'

    A district court judge in Seattle has refused to grant a declaratory ruling that ivi TV’s service does not violate broadcast copyright protection, Broadcasting & Cable is reporting. The suit, filed in September, was a “a preemptive move to discourage needless litigation from big media,” according to ivi founder and c.e.o. Todd Weaver  (Current, Oct. 4, 2010). Soon after that suit was filed, PBS, WNET.org, WGBH and 22 other plaintiffs asked the U.S. District Court in New York to keep ivi from selling their TV signals online. That action is still pending. The Seattle-based ivi captures and encrypts TV stations’ signals and distributes them through a web app to subscribers who pay it $4.99 a month.
  • KLRN launches new public affairs program

    KLRN in San Antonio premiered Texas Week With Rick Casey on Thursday (Jan. 20). Casey, a longtime columnist with the local News-Express as well as the Houston Chronicle, said the public affairs show will offer “a quieter discussion about important issues.” The show’s blog provides a look behind the scenes as the program was developed.
  • University of Houston to merge its PBS and NPR member stations

    The University of Houston is merging its HoustonPBS/Channel 8 with its NPR station KUHF-FM/88.7 into one organization called Houston Public Media. The city’s CultureMap arts news website is reporting that TV and radio staffers were told in a meeting Thursday (Jan. 20).