Nice Above Fold - Page 945
- Jay Kernis, NPR’s senior v.p. of programming, answered questions about Bob Edwards from listeners today in an online chat. “The news demands of the broadcast require more than one host to keep the program timely every morning,” he said. Kernis has also written an FAQ: “Twenty-five years ago, Morning Edition was created with a single, in-studio host. That model is no longer sufficient to bring the weight of credible, in-depth reporting that we are demanding of ourselves.”
- A few months after listener complaints provoked “Car Talk” to switch its streaming audio to Windows Media Player, the program has returned its stream to Real Player. According to hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi, Real has promised to eliminate pop-up ads, make its free player easier to access, and otherwise address the issues that fueled listeners’ web rage.
- In an interview with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, NPR President Kevin Klose talks publicly about the reassignment of Bob Edwards—though he says little that other NPR execs haven’t already said: “Edwards’ strengths are actually anchoring from the studio. What we’re looking for is more diversity in our studio hosting and a kind of knowledge of what is happening in places that may be very far away from the studio.”
- Queen Elizabeth, among others, has signed off on the hiring of Michael Grade as BBC chairman, the London Telegraph reported today. Grade, a former BBC program exec, spent eight years at semi-public Channel 4, earning the nickname “Michael de-Grade” for his racy program choices. Both BBC’s chairman and its director general resigned in the Iraq reporting scandal. [Washington Post report.]
- The organizer of the “Save Bob!” petition is now urging Bob’s backers to boycott NPR underwriters. He also wants them to ask lawmakers to cut NPR’s funding and limit underwriting credit language. Columnist Ellen Goodman calls Edwards’ removal a “wake-up call” to an aging America. Another columnist says NPR “is acting like any other big, powerful, dumb, clumsy, unfeeling, implacable, stonewalling, soulless bureaucracy.” And at KUER-FM in Salt Lake City, Morning Edition is bringing in half its usual on-air fundraising take.
- In letters to listeners posted on their websites, public radio stations are discussing the departure of Bob Edwards from Morning Edition. Jim King, director of WVXU in Cincinnati, is particularly blunt: “…[I]t is impossible for me to convey my own sense of outrage and betrayal by the network we supposedly ‘own’ as member stations.”
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