Nice Above Fold - Page 868
Dvorkin heads to CCJ
Jeffrey Dvorkin is leaving his post as NPR’s ombudsman to serve as executive director of the Committee of Concerned Journalists and the Goldenson Chair of Community Broadcasting at the Missouri School of Journalism. Dvorkin was NPR’s first ombud and held the job for six years after serving as its v.p. of news. In his farewell column, he offers advice to his successor: “Know that public radio listeners are overwhelmingly smart, passionate and insistent. You will find that it is important to take their comments seriously, but never personally. You’ll live longer if you do.” (He also reveals that several colleagues refuse to speak to him due to past criticism of their work.)'Jimmy Jimmy BoBo' Lehrer Makes Birthday Party Newsworthy
The Washington Post reports that a three-year-old Minnesotan boy recently enjoyed a very special birthday party with, of all things, a NewsHour with Jim Lehrer theme. Henry Schally is a major fan of the show and knows its personalities by name. “When correspondent Kwame Holman started delivering his report, Henry yelled out ‘Kwame Holman!’,” according to WCCO-TV in Minneapolis.OTM interview about Public Insight Journalism
For the professional media, Public Insight Journalism is the way it can remain relevant [RealPlayer audio file], says Michael Skoler of Minnesota Public Radio/American Public Media in an interview with Bob Garfield of On the Media. MPR is sharing the online/database system for expanding journalists’ sources with several other pubradio stations. In Current, Skoler describes five ways PIJ helps reporters do their job better.
calendarlive.com: 800 WORDS - Laugh liberally
A Los Angeles Times writer examines the conservative’s distaste for A Prairie Home Companion. “With the arrival of Robert Altman’s new film ‘A Prairie Home Companion,’ Keillor and ‘APHC’ have the opportunity to be hated by a much wider audience,” he writes.NPR : Ultra Avant-Garde Radio
Hear what happens when an NPR producer processes the network’s programming through a Dada filter.Paid product placement said to be widespread
Here’s another chance for public broadcasters to demonstrate their trustworthiness … or not. Even Advertising Age says: “Something’s rotten with the state of media.” In a survey of 266 senior marketing execs cited by the magazine, almost half said they’ve paid for product placement in glossy periodicals, TV or other media. Ad Age has reported that auto marketers are pushing hard for paid placements.
House committee restores $20 mil to CPB
The House Appropriations committee restored $20 million to CPB’s 2007 funding, but didn’t alter its proposals to eliminate $104.5 million in federal aid for digital conversion and edtech programs, report the Los Angeles Times and Broadcasting & Cable. The committee also declined to provide a 2009 advance appropriation for CPB.Atlas to exit PBS this month
Another change to the PBS executive ranks: Los Angeles-based Co-Chief Programmer Jacoba Atlas will leave her job at the end of the month, reports the New York Times. John Wilson, programming co-chief working at PBS headquarters, keeps his job and will report to Boland. Wilson’s claim to fame, according to the Washington Post‘s Lisa de Moraes, is being “the guy who moved Masterpiece Theatre from Sunday.”PBS hires KQED's John Boland
John Boland, executive v.p. of San Francisco’s KQED-TV/FM, will join PBS in September as chief content officer. His hiring, announced at today’s PBS Board meeting, is the first change to PBS’s executive ranks since President Paula Kerger signed on in March.Mermigas column on PBS
“New-media’s consumer-supported business model is not much different from public broadcasting’s long-standing membership pledges and corporate sponsorships,” observes media writer Diane Mermigas in a column examining the challenges ahead for PBS.Conrad on HD Radio
Robert Conrad, president of WCLV-FM in Cleveland, says the technological shortcomings of HD Radio “[are] really very discouraging and [are] leading us to wonder why we should bother to promote HD. To do so will only disappoint, and, perhaps, antagonize a significant segment of the audience who finds that the system doesn’t deliver.” (Via The Future of Radio.)Charlie Rose returns after recovering from surgery
Charlie Rose returns to his round table tonight after emergency heart surgery interrupted on overseas trip in March, AP reports. Topic No. 1 will be heart surgery. Guest hosts have included WNYC’s Brian Lehrer, ABC’s Barbara Walters, NBC’s Brian Williams, CBS’s Bob Schieffer and The New Yorker‘s David Remnick. Interviews from his show are available on demand for 99 cents each through Google Video.James Barrett dies
James Barrett, NPR’s first public relations director and a former director of public information for New York’s WNET, died of pneumonia June 4 in Fairfax, Va., according to the Washington Post. He was 75.Louisville Courier-Journal: New team running public radio stations
Board members and senior staffers are running the Public Radio Partnership in Louisville, Ky., in the absence of a permanent president, reports the Courier-Journal. The article details further strife among staff and members of the board, with one member resigning last month and two others stirring up controversy.Who's fighting for rightward balance at CPB?
As pubcasting girds for another fight over federal funding, the Washington Times asks “public TV insiders of a conservative bent” whether the rightward cause they championed has been lost.
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