Nice Above Fold - Page 782
ITVS film gets Oscar nod
“Waltz with Bashir” continues its run of prizes and nominations with a nod in the Best Foreign Language Film category of the Academy Awards. It’s the 10th Oscar nomination for ITVS, and the first for its ITVS International initiative. The presitgious awards show airs Feb. 22 from the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood.Congress moves on DTV date, broadband stimulus
The Senate has approved a bill that would delay the DTV transition date from Feb. 17 to June 12; it will vote on that next week. Also on Jan. 23, the House OK’d rules governing $2.8 billion for high-speed broadband access, one chunk of the proposed $6 billion broadband update funds that are part of the $825 billion economic stimulus bill.Upcoming P.O.V. doc gets Oscar nomination
The Betrayal, a documentary that will air during P.O.V.’s 2009 season, was nominated for an Academy Award. Produced and directed by Ellen Kuras and Thavisouk Phrasavath, the film–23 years in the making–follows the experiences of Phrasavath, a Laotian immigrant, and his family after they come to America. The doc also recently received two nominations for the Cinema Eye Honors for Nonfiction Filmmaking.
MacArthur grantmaker Woody Wickham dies
Woody Wickham, 66, a key grantmaker to public broadcasting at the MacArthur Foundation, died of cancer on Sunday at his Chicago home, the Chicago Tribune reported. In more than a dozen years at MacArthur, he helped support such projects as the breakthrough film Hoop Dreams and projects of independent radio producer Dave Isay, including the massive oral history project StoryCorps.Cincinnati Public Radio to operate WMUB in Oxford
Miami University of Ohio plans to turn over operations of WMUB, an NPR affiliate that has broadcast from its campus for 58 years, to Cincinnati Public Radio. The management agreement is being facilitated by Public Radio Capital and comes less than two years after a university study committee “strongly” recommended that the station pursue partnerships with other news organizations or public stations in Dayton. The university annually contributes $500,000 of the WMUB’s operating budget and provides another $300,000 in indirect subsidies. “[T]he financial obligation of WMUB can no longer be borne by the university with the economic challenges we face,” said Miami President David Hodge.WNET to cuts jobs, budget
New York’s WNET-Thirteen will cut 8 percent of its upcoming budget through cost reductions and job eliminations. Also affected will be parent organization WNET.org and sister station WLIW-21. WNET.org’s President and CEO Neal Shapiro told The Observer that of roughly 500 staffers, some 85 positions are targeted. According to Shapiro, individual and corporate as well as government funding for WNET and WLIW all have declined significantly in recent months. Also, N.Y. Gov. David Paterson’s new budget includes a 50 percent reduction in the overall funding for pubTV, which would mean about a $4.5 million cut for WNET.org. “If that happens, we’ll have to take more actions,” Shapiro told the paper.
Obama selects acting FCC chair
President Barack Obama has named FCC Commissioner Michael Copps temporary head of the regulatory agency. Copps has been one of the five-member commission since 2001. Tech exec Julius Genachowski is the new president’s reported choice to head the FCC, but that appointment may take weeks or perhaps months.Ifill's new book about politics and race on the shelf
NewsHour correspondent Gwen Ifill’s new book, The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama, was published on Inauguration Day. Ifill, who moderated the vice presidential debate last fall, drew criticism from John McCain supporters when news of her book contract hit the press. Critics assumed she would favor Obama’s camp, but The Breakthrough is “less about Barack Obama’s victory than a generational shift among black politicians and voters, black and white,” says Bob Minzesheimer of USA Today. “Her book is a serious but readable assessment, not a celebration,” he writes. Ifill mentions the debate flap briefly: “I was a hard target to resist — an African-American journalist writing about race could not possibly be capable of thinking bigger thoughts, could she?”Detroit pubTV lays off 11
Detroit Public Television laid off 11 employees yesterday–about 16 percent of the station’s staff. Sister radio station WRCJ-FM laid off one employee. The TV station made cuts to the reception desk, accounting and promotions departments, and all who were laid off received a severance package, according to David Devereaux, v.p. of communications.Ombudsmen respond to complaints of biased coverage of Gaza conflict
Pubcasting ombudsmen Alicia Shepard of NPR and Michael Getler of PBS have received hundreds of complaints about biased coverage of the Israeli incursion into Gaza, and their latest columns analyze to what extent the criticisms are justified. Some listeners say public radio coverage is so biased that NPR is actually “National Palestinian Radio,” Shepard writes, but the biggest issue appears to be a lack of historical or political context in NPR’s reporting. “Context is critical but there are certain time constraints that simply won’t allow the kind of detail some listeners want in every four-minute piece,” she writes. At PBS, Getler agrees with viewers that a Bill Moyers commentary on the Israeli-Hamas conflict was “not only inflammatory but wrong.”Journalists! Free lunch today, thanks to Google, Yahoo and the Web
If you thought that media can adopt Web 2.0 commercialism without content- and news-distorting consequences parallel with those that operate so effectively on commercial TV and cable, check out the critique coming from Oxford’s Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, as reported in Britain’s Guardian and on Journalism.co.uk. “Publishers are in danger of being reduced to the digital equivalent of a windsock, shaped by the short-term whims of the news consumer,” says Oxford economic geographer Andrew Currah in a release. If they follow the revenue lure of online traffic, journalists will feel steady pressure to reconsider content decisions, homogenize their subject matter, bend their values and favor star journalists, celebrities and opinion over hard news.Qualcomm vs. PBS
Qualcomm, looking to use analog channels for its MediaFLO mobile TV service after the digital transition, sent letters Jan. 19 to legislators asking stations in Boston, Miami, San Francisco and Houston to drop their signals on the original Feb. 17 date. But Northern California Public Broadcasting, with one of the analog channels Qualcomm wants, says it wants to keep that analog signal on until Congress orders otherwise. Stay tuned.A Libertarian's view of CPB's stimulus request
If the service pubcasting provided “was indeed so valuable that we, the American people, could not do without it,” writes libertarian blogger J.J. Jackson, “they would not need to beg their government benefactors for a single dime. ” Instead of a bailout, Jackson adds, “What they need is programming that people will tune in to hear!” A reply: Upstate New York pubradio engineer Aaron Read replies to Jackson: Why are so many liberatarians hypocrites when it comes to NPR?Torture doc starts airing
The doc Torturing Democracy is bubbling into the news again. AU media associate prof Rick Rockwell, writing on the blog iVory Towerz, says Maryland’s MPT has run the documentary, “but only a few weeks before the new Obama administration takes office.” By showing the doc, which deals with torture in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay, “this late in the Bush years also gives the program more the ring of history rather than a documentary about a current topic.” Dozens of stations aired the show last year before this week’s scheduled PBS airing.Rocky Mountain PBS hires new president
Rocky Mountain PBS in Pueblo, Colo., recently named Doug Price president, reports the Pueblo Chieftain. Price formerly served as president of FirstBank of Colorado and co-founded Educare Colorado, a nonprofit focused on child care. At Rocky Mountain, he replaces James Morgese, who left the station in October after 15 years as president.
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