Nice Above Fold - Page 590

  • Nic Harcourt moving from KCRW to KCSN

    Triple-A music veteran Nic Harcourt is joining KCSN 88.5 FM at California State University, Northridge, the school announced Friday (June 17). Harcourt has spent 12 years a KCRW/Los Angeles, 10 as music director and host of the influential Morning Becomes Eclectic program. He was the first broadcaster to webcast in video live in-studio sessions and the first pubradio host to take the show on the road with live broadcasts from events in New York, Austin, Vancouver and London, the announcement notes. “Many artists, including Adele, Coldplay and Norah Jones, have credited Harcourt for putting them on the map and helping them achieve stardom,” it adds.
  • Meanwhile, on Norwegian pubTV . . .

    In a unique live broadcast that began Thursday (June 16), viewers of public television’s NRK2 in Norway can watch all 8,040 minutes of the Hurtigruten MMS Nordnorge cruise ship and its roughly 670 passengers and crew as the vessel steams north along Norway’s jagged coastline, reports Reuters. Coverage includes all on-board announcements and views from 11 cameras focusing on fjords, boat traffic around the ship, officers on the bridge and passengers strolling the decks. “It is slow, it is very slow,” said Rune Moeklebust, the project manager for the show. Moeklebust said 1.3 million of Norway’s 4.9 million residents at least were “stopping by” NRK2 between 8 p.m.
  • Attention, producers: New NEH guidelines are up

    New application guidelines have just been posted for the Division of Public Programs on the National Endowment for the Humanities website for “America’s Media Makers: Development and Production” grants. One upcoming deadline is June 29, for “Bridging Cultures through Film: International Topics.” The division funds radio, television, and digital projects in the humanities intended for public audiences.
  • Seltzer leaves WBEZ to head SAG Foundation

    Jill Seltzer, former head of institutional advancement for WBEZ/Chicago Public Media, is the new president of the Screen Actors Guild Foundation. Seltzer told the Hollywood Reporter that her background dovetailed well with her new position. “The job is a mixture of fundraising, program delivery and management,” she said. The foundation is a separate entity from the guild and is responsible for its own fundraising. The organization serves actors, through targeted outreach, and the general public, through literacy programs in public schools, hospitals and shelters.
  • WDUQ staffers lose jobs as of June 30

    As part of a deal finalized Thursday (June 16), the 20 full- and part-time employees of WDUQ FM in Pittsburgh are terminated effective June 30, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports. Duquesne University is turning over control of the station to Essential Public Media, a joint venture between WYEP-FM and Public Media Co. (a new subsidiary of Public Radio Capital). Two employees, interim General Manager Fred Serino and Business Manager Vicky Rumpf, will remain through the transition.
  • Sesame Street in Tanzania sponsors malaria outreach campaign

    The First Lady of Tanzania, Salma Kikwete, launched Kilimani Sesame’s Malaria Education Outreach Campaign today (June 16) in the East African country. The campaign includes four malaria prevention public service announcements for TV and radio in Swahili, as well as nearly 16,000 storybooks to be distributed to primary schools nationwide. Children got to hear Kikwete read the book titled Chandarua Salama (“The Safe Net”) at offices of Wanawake Na Maendeleo (WAMA) in Dar es Salaam, a charity headed by the First Lady. The storybook, printed in Swahili and English, follows Muppet friends Lulu, Neno and Kami as they go through their bedtime routine and learn the importance of sleeping under a bed net to prevent the mosquito-borne illness.
  • #MuckReads a new "experiment in social aggregation" for ProPublica

    ProPublica has launched the Twitter stream #MuckReads, a way for readers, reporters and editors to share public-service news stories. The nonprofit investigative news org calls it the next evolution of its Investigations Elsewhere roundup. “#MuckReads is an experiment in social aggregation,” ProPublica said in on its site. “The feature as you see it is just the beginning. We’ve got big plans for feature upgrades and integration with Facebook, but first we want to see what works and what needs more tinkering.”
  • News 21 project expands to include all journalism schools

    News 21, a journalism education project launched in 2005 at five j-schools, will be available to all journalism and mass communications programs in the country thanks to $3.9 million in new support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the two announced today (June 15). The support brings the total initiative to $19.7 million. It will be administered by Arizona State University. The expansion comes after an independent evaluation found the initiative has “already helped transform” curricula and is getting more students news jobs “at a critical juncture in the industry’s history,” the statement said.
  • FCC report picks up on AIR's push for airtime, funding for radio indies

    The FCC’s latest report “The Information Needs of Communities” may be long on verbiage and short on remedies, but it does offer some key insights for independent producers, public media analyst Jessica Clark writes for the Association for Independents in Radio’s MQ2 blog. Public broadcasters’ expansion onto online and mobile platforms, as well as the explosion of nonprofit media outlets, creates new opportunities and more competition in many arenas, Clark writes. She points to a key FCC recommendation that policy makers reconsider which types of media deserve CPB aid. “[T]his report does not explicitly recommend additional funding for public broadcasting,” Clark writes, “However, it does recommend CPB funding requirements be reconsidered so that it’s easier for new kinds of projects and outlets to receive federal dollars.”
  • Radio Bilingüe announces suspension of LA>Forward, LAPM initiatives

    Fresno, Calif., broadcaster Radio Bilingüe has suspended the LAForward and Los Angeles Public Media projects “for the foreseeable future,” it announced Wednesday (June 15). “Radio Bilingüe’s efforts to secure a radio broadcast outlet in Los Angeles for LAPM have proven unsuccessful, while federal funding cuts to CPB’s digital appropriation are precluding the agency from assuring support to LAPM in the coming years,” the statement said. With backing from CPB, work began two years ago to develop and test programming for a new multiplatform public media outlet targeting young, educated minority listeners in Los Angeles (Current, July 20, 2009).
  • MinnPost, Voice of San Diego get very little web traffic, report reveals

    MinnPost and Voice of San Diego — two online nonprofit news outlets often held up as models for the future of local news coverage — actually receive scant web traffic, according to a new report, “Less of the Same: The Lack of Local News on the Internet” (PDF). The study was commissioned by the FCC as part of its quadrennial review of broadcast ownership regulations. The author is Matthew Hindman, assistant professor of media and public affairs at George Washington University. (Details on the 11 FCC studies here.) Hindman used comScore panel data tracking 250,000 Internet users across more than a million Web domains, focusing specifically on online local news within the top 100 U.S.
  • City Council drops idea for new Chattanooga Channel

    The City Council in Chattanooga, Tenn., has voted down a plan to contribute $275,000 to WTCI/Tennessee Valley PBS to launch a Chattanooga Channel, reports the Chattanoogan. Paul Grove, WTCI president, had proposed that all City Council meetings, including committees, would be aired live and streamed on a website. Grove said the channel would bring new “access and transparency” to city government. Councilwoman Pam Ladd said the channel “is a wonderful idea,” but not a priority at this time. The council will pay WTCI $60,000 to continue televising its meetings; the county is dropping that spending.
  • WMFE pubradio safe, "hugely viable," trustee president says

    Despite WMFE’s dire warnings to the FCC about its financial stability, trustees chairman Bob Showalter said the Orlando, Fla., station will not fail because the radio presence remains strong. “90.7 is hugely viable,” he told the Orlando Sentinel Tuesday (June 14). “Things are not dire at 90.7.” He said trustees plan on putting the $3 million from the pending TV sale in a quasi-endowment, spending the dividends on 90.7 and increasing local news coverage.
  • BBC working on live reporting app

    The BBC is developing an app for its reporters in the field to file video, still photos and audio directly into the BBC system from an iPhone or iPad, according to Journalism.co.uk. “Reporters have been using smart phones for a while now but it was never good quality,” said Martin Turner, head of operations for newsgathering. “You might do it when there was a really important story. Now it is beginning to be a realistic possibility to use iPhones and other devices for live reporting, and in the end if you’ve got someone on the scene then you want to be able to use them.
  • Assessing the value of college radio in Nashville

    What is lost when a city’s college radio station is sold and converted to a public radio outlet? It’s a question that free-form radio fans are asking with increasing frequency as student-operated FMs drop off the left end of the dial. In Nashville, where Vanderbilt University’s WRVU ended its nearly 60-year run as an FM station last week, radio audiences gained a full-time classical music service from the city’s NPR News station, WPLN. But WRVU’s fans and advocates lamented the sudden loss of a station that essentially operated as a community radio outlet. WRVU was “one of the only venues for Nashville artists of all stripes to get airplay — rappers, punks, headbangers, even blues and bluegrass bands,” the Nashville Scene reported.