Nice Above Fold - Page 864

  • Salt Lake Tribune - Public radio station manager earns $179,815 as company loses money

    KCPW-FM in Salt Lake City ran a $609,366 deficit in fiscal year 2005 while paying its General Manager Blair Feulner $179,815, reports the city’s Tribune. The sale of an unused license covered the losses and also paid Feulner and his wife a bonus of $895,000, the paper says.
  • Profile 2006

    Impress your friends at parties this summer with your encyclopedic knowledge of NPR’s Profile 2006! Tell them over hors d’oeuvres what percentage of NPR listeners play bingo (2.83 percent)! While smoking a fine cigar, let drop that 29.32 percent of NPR listeners have bought underwear in the last year. You’ll be the toast of the town. Now get reading!
  • Once the feisty advocate for indies, AIVF fades to black

    The Association of Independent Video and Filmmakers, a 30-year-old group that coordinated activism and provided networking and training for independent filmmakers, shuttered its offices and shut down operations in late June. The Manhattan-based association told members in March that it faced a financial crisis, but an emergency fundraising appeal didn’t generate enough contributions to maintain operations. The AIVF Board is looking for another group to take over publication of The Independent, AIVF’s monthly magazine. Although the board considered a scenario of eventually resuming operations, it’s unlikely that the association will revive, said Bart Weiss, organizer of the Dallas Video Festival and board president.
  • MoveOn.org targets 'NPR-PBS 24'

    MoveOn.org is soliciting donations for a campaign to “Beat the NPR-PBS 24“–the 24 members of Congress up for reelection who voted to cut pubcasting’s federal aid. “With your help, together we can retire enough of these representatives to tip the balance on this issue—and send a signal that cutting public broadcasting comes with a political price,” writes MoveOn.org’s “Political Action Team” in an e-mail solicitation [Via Indybay.org].
  • Grassroots Radio Conference

    Chicago Public Radio’s Julie Shapiro blogs about the Grassroots Radio Conference, which begins tomorrow in Madison, Wis. “though i respect, not to mention adore the community of public radio producers i’ve come to know over the past six years, the public radio system at large feels pretty sterile, isolated and starched compared with the sometimes crazy, often manic and totally dedicated community station devotees,” she writes.
  • Media cos. want parents, not the FCC, to control kids' TV viewing

    Commercial networks, broadcast, cable and consumer electronics trade associations, film studios and the Ad Council are partnering on a broad campaign to educate parents about V-chips, cable channel blocking and other tools and techniques for controlling what kids see on TV, reports Broadcasting & Cable. A new website, www.thetvboss.org, is the cornerstone of the campaign, which is an effort to stave off federal content regulation as FCC leaders aggressively police broadcast indecency and support a la carte cable models.
  • Schorr a "wise old man with all his buttons"

    NPR’s Daniel Schorr “is a wise old man with all his buttons, and that is a precious resource,” says a media analyst in a USA Today feature on the newsman.
  • PBS Kids Sprout cans "technical virgin"

    Digital cable net PBS Kids Sprout fired Melanie Martinez, host of the network’s nightly The Good Night Show, for appearing in two spoof videos titled Technical Virgin, the Associated Press reports (via the Washington Post). The videos, produced before Martinez joined the kids network, parody PSAs about how young women can keep their virginity. “PBS Kids Sprout has determined that the dialogue in this video is inappropriate for her role as a preschool program host and may undermine her character’s credibility with our audience,” said Sandy Wax, network president.
  • Cringely: Print still beats the web for news

    Longtime Internet journalist Robert X. Cringely, PBS.org columnist, outlines the ways in which musty old newspapers are still far superior to web news outlets. “The Internet is, in fact, the idiot savant of journalism,” he writes, “supremely good at a thing or two and not at all good at anything else.”
  • TimesDispatch.com | Native American channel launching?

    A host on WPFW-FM in Washington, D.C., has joined the effort to launch a cable channel for Native Americans. “We can see the culture, the history, the issues, the everyday life — the smiles and the frowns — of Native Americans,” says Jay Winter Nightwolf in the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Nightwolf is news director and chief of television and radio program production for Native American Television Inc.
  • WTWP Radio Gets Off to a Slow, But Game Start

    Washington Post Radio in Washington, D.C., earned less than a one percent audience share in its first three months on the air, the paper reports. “It’s in the low range of what we expected,” says station exec Jim Farley, who has made clear his intent to draw listeners away from the city’s public radio outlets.
  • 6% of U.S. Web Users Have Downloaded Podcasts, Says Nielsen Analytics: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance

    Six percent of web users in the United States have downloaded podcasts, according to a Nielsen Analytics report, and 38 percent of podcast downloaders say they’re listening to radio less often. “For a technology that’s relatively new, it’s a good number that indicates growth,” says an analyst in the Washington Post.