Programs/Content
Reporting series illuminates roles of Virginians who make democracy work
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A series of profiles from the Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism and WHRO takes inspiration from community journalism.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-stations/information-equity-initiative/page/308/)
A series of profiles from the Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism and WHRO takes inspiration from community journalism.
Stations have found that monetizing their local news sites takes experimentation and “a lot of learning.”
“WNED is currently working on the next chapter of ‘Reading Rainbow,'” a station executive said.
“The challenge for this period is fusing the strengths and public support of traditional public media with the energy and competencies of new entrants and civic institutions outside of media.”
BYU Broadcasting says it produces “original programming the entire family can enjoy together.”
WGBH developed the content with input from 50 teacher advisers.
In college, Maggie Martin felt invigorated telling listeners what was happening and why it was important.
As public media heads into its next 50 years, shifting strategies to focus on content “will require a hard turn and painful decisions that affect finances, people and structures.”
The station will hire an on-demand producer, develop podcasts, create content to serve “diverse audiences” and “uncover unique, untold stories.”
Trainers Judith Smelser and Mike Marcotte discuss the new skills required when a reporter moves into a leadership position.
Bloom adapted magazine publishers’ practices of list-buying and direct-mail testing to public broadcasting membership programs.
CPB had given $30,000 to help the station recover from hurricane damage.