Nice Above Fold - Page 845

  • Unhappy classical fans in Texas can apply for LPFM

    Despite a “significant number” of objections, the FCC will allow Kilgore Junior College in Kilgore, Texas, to sell KTPB-FM, its noncommercial station, to a religious broadcaster. But the commission has taken an unusual step and given KTPB’s unhappy listeners a one-time chance to apply for a low-power FM license that could restore a classical music station to the community. (PDF.)
  • This liberal wants his WESUN

    The return of classical music on Washington’s WETA-FM has left the city without Weekend Edition Sunday, and the editor-at-large of the American Prospect is not happy. “Is there cosmic justice in the fact that people in the hollows of eastern Kentucky and the remote plains of Nebraska can hear a serious couple hours’ worth of radio news on Sunday mornings, while those of us who have taken the good time, trouble, and expense to deposit ourselves in the nation’s political nerve center — and even enmesh ourselves in its sordid particulars — can’t?” he asks.
  • TV critics get their wish for "The War"

    PBS will debut Ken Burns’ The War on Sept. 23, one week later than originally planned. The Washington Post‘s Lisa de Moraes reports on the schedule change, which television critics clamored for during the recent press tour, and consults anonymous commercial network programmers. They describe the switch as “monumentally stupid.”
  • David Folkenflik, hot wiseacre

    Thanks to FishbowlDC, we learn that NPR media reporter David Folkenflik owns four suits and had a scrambled-egg-and-tomato sandwich for breakfast. Not only that, but people think he is hot.
  • NPR extends ContentDepot transition

    With problems saddling the rollout of NPR’s new ContentDepot program distribution system, the network will keep a backup for the system in place until at least April, longer than initially planned. Some station staffers tell Radio World that the transition is “a case study in how a big technological change is fraught with problems.” (More from NPR Distribution at prss.org.)
  • NPR Labs - HD Radio User Information

    Wondering which HD Radio to buy? NPR Labs recommends two tabletop and two aftermarket auto models. (PDF.)
  • New laughing, pizza-slinging Muppets on horizon

    Mattel, maker of the ever-popular Tickle Me Elmo dolls, will follow up last year’s anniversary T.M.X. Elmo with “extreme” Ernie and Cookie Monster dolls to be released this fall, CNNMoney.com reports. Also coming soon: Pizza Elmo, a doll with a pizza that sings along with him. Pubcasting critic Jeffrey Chester takes aim at a Sesame Workshop moneymaker that he says pushes junk food and further commercializes childhood.
  • APTS survey: Most consumers still in the dark about the DTV transition

    A survey sponsored by the Association of Public Television Stations found that 61 percent of respondents did not know a DTV transition was happening; 10 percent had limited awareness; and 25 percent were somewhat or very aware. APTS is leading a coalition of trade and interest groups that is competing for the $5 million Congress set aside for consumer education in last year’s DTV bill. “There are more than 21 million U.S. households that get their TV exclusively free and over the air, and we know these homes are heavy viewers of public television,” APTS President John Lawson said. “That puts us, working with our partners, in a strong position to provide information about the digital transition to the people who need it most.”
  • WUNC to open Greensboro studio

    WUNC-FM in Chapel Hill, N.C., plans to open a satellite studio in Greensboro, N.C., reports the Greensboro News-Record. The studio will be staffed with a reporter and a fundraiser. WUNC and WFDD in Winston-Salem, N.C., compete for listeners in Greensboro, which lies between the two stations. (More coverage in the Lincoln Tribune.)
  • Trusted Space - Media: Todd Mundt - The Iowa Story - A Story for all Public Radio?

    Todd Mundt, director of content and media for Iowa Public Radio, talks with Rob Paterson about his approach to creating the new network and representing the changes to the public. “I don’t think that any people can connect with an institution,” Mundt says. “My bet is that, if I speak for myself and if I hold myself accountable and if I allow people to reach me and that I engage directly with them — then Iowans will accept me for doing my best.” (Current article about Iowa Public Radio.)
  • KQED debuts big eco-project

    KQED’s multimedia science/environmental literacy project, Quest, was previewed in yesterday’s San Francisco Chronicle. Quest‘s website, with maps and GPS data to help users go see the environment in person, and to download programs, launches Thursday at kqed.org/quest; the Friday morning radio reports begin this week and the Tuesday night TV half-hours launch Feb. 6. The Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation put up $3 million of the $7.7 million cost, including R&D funds. PBS hired the KQED exec who oversaw Quest, John Boland, as its new chief content officer.
  • The Sound of Young America: My letter to Weekend Edition

    Independent producer Jesse Thorn criticizes the tone of two recent NPR stories that touched on hip-hop: “It is unacceptable to me that after fifteen years at the top of the charts and thirty years on the cultural scene, hip-hop should continue to be marginalized not only by the so-called mainstream media, but also by public media.” Jon Kalish, who filed one of the stories Thorn discusses, responds in a comment: “Maybe you had to be there but I think the scene certainly warranted a ‘gee whiz’ approach to this story.”
  • BusinessWeek.com: HD Radio Still Taking the Rap

    The potential rise of satellite radio and in-car broadband poses a challenge to the adoption of HD Radio, suggests a BusinessWeek.com article. (Via Technology360.)
  • WGBH Morning Stories video available on YouTube

    Tony Kahn of Boston’s WGBH has staked out a corner of YouTube with videos that spin off from his pioneering Morning Stories podcast.
  • ZNet: TOTN lacks antiwar voices

    A writer for ZNet takes issue with the range of discussion regarding Iraq on NPR’s Talk of the Nation: “The program framework implicitly deigns left antiwar voices as not worthy of being part of the serious discussion going on among the invited guests. Instead, they are relegated to the role of peripheral ‘callers.’ The hierarchy is as plain as can be.”