Nice Above Fold - Page 847
KTOO launches new services
KTOO in Juneau, Alaska, launched three distinct programming streams Friday, one news and two music, making use of two newly acquired FM signals. “If we underestimated anything, it was how complex running these three radio stations would be in the midst of other technological challenges,” President Bill Legere told the Juneau Empire.Half of Peabodys go to pubcast programs
Programs on public TV and radio received seven of the 14 duPont-Columbia Awards announced Saturday. Winners include Martin Scorsese’s Dylan bio on American Masters; Brook Lapping Productions’ Israel and the Arabs; the WGBH Cape and Island stations’ doc on Cape Cod poverty; Frontline‘s The Age of AIDS; Lisa Sleeth and Jim Butteworth’s Seoul Train on Independent Lens; public TV’s California Connected; and NPR’s Iraq coverage.Indiana pubradio net buys station
Northeast Indiana Public Radio in Fort Wayne plans to pay a commercial broadcaster $1.75 million for an FM channel on which it will air classical music, reports the Fort Wayne Daily News. “This will be a place that finally gives a greater voice to the fine arts in Fort Wayne,” said Bruce Haines, g.m.
Law students organize against satellite radio merger
As Sirius Satellite Radio flirts with competitor XM Satellite Radio (sending their stock prices rising), a group of George Washington University law students has formed a consumer advocacy group to push for continued consumer choice and oppose monopoly. Consumer Coalition for Competition in Satellite Radio, or C3SR, will debut at the National Conference on Media Reform this weekend in Memphis.Sometimes your what do what?
Faith Salie, host of PRI’s Fair Game, lists 10 things Esquire readers don’t know about women.NewsHour didn't show all sides in Iraq panel, FAIR says
Lefty media watchdog Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting criticized a recent NewsHour panel discussion of the war in Iraq, saying it included no strong advocates for troop withdrawal. FAIR urged its readers to e-mail NewsHour producers and “encourage the program to broaden future discussions to include such voices.” PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler said he’s received more than 100 e-mails about the matter.
Study on TV violence prompts warning to broadcasters
The violence depicted in broadcast networks’ primetime programs is approaching “epidemic proportions,” according to a study issued yesterday by the Parents Television Council. FCC Commissioner Michael Copps, who appeared at the news conference unveiling the study, warned broadcasters to do a better job of policing themselves, lest Congress decides to take action, according to the Los Angeles Times.PubTV programmers launch new blog
Live from Las Vegas! PubTV programmers Keith York and Garry Denny are blogging about their adventures at the International Consumer Electronics Show. The blog, a new service of Public Television Programmers’ Association, aims to help station programmers learn what’s happening at major conferences dealing with media technologies and programming.Keillor's rules for reading the paper
A traditional newspaper is far more stylish than a laptop, Garrison Keillor writes in this Salon piece. “A man at a laptop is a man at a desk, a stiff, a drone,” he says. “A newspaper reader, by comparison, is a swordsman, a wrangler, a private eye.” Here he outlines rules for reading papers with the proper amount of savoir faire.BP backs KCET's twin series with $15 million
KCET has received its biggest-ever underwriting grant: $15 million to go national with its twin Peabody-winning parenting/caregiving programs A Place of Our Own and Los NiƱos en Su Casa. The donors: BP America and the BP Foundation. BP previously donated $10 million to launch the series in California. CPB will give $3.8 million for the national launch and the First 5 California Commission will contribute $6 million. Earlier Current feature on the programs.NAB to launch DTV publicity campaign
APTS will be part of a coalition of broadcasting, retail and social interest groups, led by the National Association of Broadcasters, that is mounting a two-year campaign to educate consumers about the 2009 analog TV shut-off, The Hill reports.Open Media Network promotes PC-to-TV downloads
Open Media Network, the online non-commercial content portal featuring lots of pubcaster programs, is optimizing its video for larger screens, it announced at this week’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. OMN content is viewable at qualities suitable for TV screens via broadband-equipped sets such as HP’s MediaSmart LCD TV, or TiVo DVRs.Tomlinson won't seek BBG renomination
Kenneth Tomlinson, ousted former chair of the CPB Board, asked President Bush not to renominate him to the Broadcasting Board of Governors, the federal agency that oversees Voice of America and other international media efforts, the Washington Post reports. Last fall a State Department probe found Tomlinson worked on his horse-racing business from his government office and improperly hired a friend, among other missteps. Despite the allegations, President Bush renominated him to the board in November but few expected the new Democratic majority in Congress to confirm him. Tomlinson, who will serve on the BBG until a replacement is named, is going to write a book about his experiences.Getler calls for more aggressive Iraq coverage
PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler proposes a new year’s resolution for public TV journalists and producers of news and public affairs programs: ratchet up your “determination to challenge, to explore and to cut through spin” in coverage of the Bush administration’s new strategy for Iraq.NPR develops another morning show -- for relative youngsters
NPR announced today that it’s developing a new show — target audience, ages 25-44 — that will compete with its own Morning Edition. The program, based at NPR’s New York bureau, will air on stations (some through digital multicasts), station websites and Sirius Satellite Radio. Matt Martinez, a Weekend Edition producer, will head development, NPR spokeswoman Andi Sporkin told Current. Producers will pilot the show and seek feedback starting in September. (They will use a new piloting process called Rough Cuts, which NPR is now using to develop its second African-American news program, hosted by Michel Martin.)
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