Nice Above Fold - Page 776

  • FCC issues more DTV transition directions

    TV stations have until March 17 to tell the FCC when they will be transitioning to DTV before June 12. The commission released the order (PDF) Friday. It also recommends that stations not transition before April 16.
  • Online chat to focus on courting individual donors

    How to better appeal to individual donors is the topic of the next online discussion hosted by The Chronicle of Philanthropy. Click there at noon Feb. 24 to participate.
  • Obama Web strategist says ditch the e-newsletters

    Thomas Gensemer, the brain behind then-Sen. Barack Obama’s Web-based election campaign, says nonprofits should forgo email newsletters and focus on short, more personal email notes providing specific instructions for participation in fund-raising efforts. “Email newsletters don’t get read, yet they take more effort to prepare than a 250-word email,” he told an audience at City University in London this week. “Email is still a killer application, but only when used properly.”
  • Muppets pop up on hot blog topics

    The economic stimulus package was the biggest topic in the blogosphere last week, but guess what else showed up? Some 6 percent of bloggers mentioned Sesame Street’s Muppet characters, according to a weekly survey by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. After CNN posted a story from the archives of the Mental Floss blog, online writers began to ponder their own fave Muppets. As one wrote, “My nickname in middle school was Fozzy the Bear because I was always constantly telling bad jokes.”
  • BBC doc focuses on Kitchen Sisters

    BBC Radio’s World Service offers an audio feature by Alan Hall about the Kitchen Sisters, Nikki Silva and Davia Nelson. “Programme one captures Davia at the duo’s production office in Francis Ford Coppola’s Zoetrope building in San Francisco. It then travels south to glimpse Nikki on the commune where she lives and where their radio stories take shape.”
  • Most DTV callers complain about reception

    Callers to the FCC with DTV-related issues complained most about technical and reception problems, according to documents from the commission. Around a quarter of nearly 28,000 calls on Feb. 17, the original transition date, focused on those topics. Nearly as many calls that day, just over 21 percent, were about problems with converter boxes or coupons. While many stations chose to wait until the new date, June 12, to drop analog broadcasts, 421 stations transitioned this week.
  • Using social networking for fund raising

    If your station is considering using social networking sites (Facebook, Twitter, MySpace) for fund raising, check out the Chronicle of Philanthropy’s recent online discussion. You’ll find answers to questions such as, how do you put a fund-raising page on Facebook? And, are there enough baby boomers comfortable with technology to make this approach an effective tool?
  • Former NPR prez named journalism dean

    Kevin Klose has been named dean of University of Maryland’s journalism school. Klose will oversee the school as it revamps its curriculum to focus more on digital and multimedia reporting. Klose was NPR president from 1998 to 2006. In November 2008, he was named president emeritus of NPR and president of the NPR Foundation.
  • Your station's DTV transition experience so far...

    Did your pubTV station turn off its analog broadcasts yesterday? If so, Current would like to hear how things went. Did you get many calls from viewers, were there any technical glitches? Can all your viewers get the digital signal? Drop Editor Steve Behrens a note at behrens@current.org.
  • Pubcasting job, salary cuts continue; WNED is latest victim

    The Western New York Public Broadcasting Association is cutting staff and salaries. WNED’s eight corporate officers took a 7.5 percent pay cut; all other employees had a 5 percent cut. Nine positions of a total 93 full-time employees were eliminated. Six of those had been vacant. The service includes WNED-TV, ThinkBright TV, and two radio stations, classical WNED-FM and WNED-AM, mainly news. WNED also is facing a $900,000 drop in state funding. Officials from New York’s eight other public TV stations are currently lobbying the governor and state legislature to amend the cuts.
  • Emergency infusion: Rx for fiscal hemorrhage

    Public television is asking Congress for a $211 million supplemental appropriation for fiscal year 2010 on top of the usual CPB funding, presenting it as disaster relief rather than another bailout.
  • Northern Calif. combo lays off 30, including much of San Jose staff

    Northern California Public Broadcasting, licensee of KQED-TV/FM and KTEH-TV in San Jose, laid off 30 employees and cut its budget 13 percent as it reacted to double-digit losses in corporate support and major-donor revenue. The restructuring, announced Feb. 2, also eliminated 14 vacant jobs and shuttered the broadcast studios of the San Jose station, which merged with KQED in 2006. The layoffs included 10 KTEH employees. A core staff of eight, including a small field production team, remains at San Jose. The Bay Area pubcaster cut spending $8 million, reducing total outlays to $54 million. “This exercise is intended to keep us in good stead through this year and carry us through 2010,” said Jeff Clarke, NCPB president.
  • CPB: System revenue may drop $418 million in fiscal 2009

    Public radio and TV station revenues may decline $418 million or 14.6 percent this fiscal year, CPB executives estimated in a presentation to the corporation’s board of directors.
  • The challenge for public radio: Letting go of our expected future

    The fact that the public radio audience is 82 percent white is a problem when the public we aspire to serve is becoming rapidly more diverse. It is absolutely imperative that we find ways to bring in new voices, and that we resist the urge to apply old filters to new ideas. ...
  • Pubradio correspondents win Polk Award

    Two pubcasters are sharing a Polk Award. Alex Blumberg of “This American Life,” produced by Chicago Public Radio and distributed by PRI, and Adam Davidson of NPR, won for their collaborative report, “The Giant Pool of Money,” explaining the events leading up to the subprime mortgage crisis. The prestigious Polk Awards, bestowed by Long Island University, are named for George Polk, a journalist who died in May 1948 covering the Greek civil war.