Nice Above Fold - Page 534

  • Fate of translators still an unknown in spectrum legislation

    There were “bodies left out on the legislative battlefield,” including TV translator stations, in the recent spectrum legislation, writes telecom attorney Scott R. Flick of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP. Those stations are not permitted to participate in the spectrum auction, are not protected from being displaced in spectrum repacking, and are not entitled to reimbursement of repacking expenses. “It is that last point that may be the most important in rural areas,” Flick notes. He uses an example of Montana, with its nearly 350 TV translators. “Moving even a third of them will be an expensive proposition for licensees whose primary purpose is not profit, but the continued availability of rural broadcast service,” he writes.
  • WFPL in Louisville shifts priorities, triples news staff in one year

    News/talk WFPL, part of Louisville Public Media, has added four reporters in the past year, “bucking a national trend that has left many news organizations with shrinking staffs amid a sluggish economy,” notes the local Courier-Journal. The WFPL newsroom has tripled from just two reporters in early 2011 to six this year. Those hires reflect a shift in priorities at the organization, said Todd Mundt, outgoing Louisville Public Media v.p. and WFPL p.d. “The goal has been to make the newsroom the center of the entire operation,” he said. Louisville Public Media President Donovan Reynolds credits recent fund drives. “When we have outlined our aspirations to the community, they have responded,” he said.
  • "NPR is still a notable outlier" in opportunities for women journos, Newsweek reports

    Newsweek’s Jesse Ellison reports on the power of women at NPR in a piece headlined, “How stuffy old NPR became a hotbed for female journalists.” Ellison points out that at NPR, women hold the top editorial position at five of seven news programs and make up nearly half the overall staff. Longtime NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg said that’s most probably a result of the days when NPR had no choice but to hire women because salaries were so low that few men wanted to work at the fledgling network.”The inadvertent result was a roster of young female talent now considered among the most respected names in radio: Totenberg, Cokie Roberts, Linda Wertheimer, and Susan Stamberg, a group affectionately known as the ‘Founding Mothers,'” who have since mentored many other NPR newswomen, Ellison says.
  • "Maria Hinojosa: One-on-One" to end production in spring 2012

    Citing “resource constraints,” WGBH is ending production of Maria Hinojosa: One-on-One, the Boston station announced today (March 5). The five-year partnership between the station and Hinojosa, a journalist, author and longtime pubcaster, produced more than 100 interviews with artists, activists, writers and civic leaders, and won an Imagen Award, which recognizes positive portrayals of Latinos in media. Nationwide, the show ran in 35 markets, and was also broadcast in Spanish on V-me through Season 3. WGBH said it is in “early development stages” of a new local Latino lifestyle program, and past episodes of One-on-One will remain available on WGBH’s digital World channel.
  • Public radio report prompts tightening of procedures for ensuring mine safety

    An investigation of a mine accident in Idaho by the Northwest News Network has prompted a federal agency to change how it handles documents regarding mine safety. Last year the network learned that a federal geologist’s report about unstable rock conditions at the Lucky Friday Mine in Mullan, Idaho, had never been sent to the mining company. In April 2011, a miner died in a tunnel collapse at Lucky Friday. After a congressman took the Mine Safety and Health Administration to task for the oversight, the head of the agency has announced that it will take additional steps to make sure that such studies are delivered to mine operators.
  • NPR adds Mundt to Digital Services team

    NPR has hired Todd Mundt as editorial director for NPR Digital Services, starting April 2. In his new position, Mundt will help stations develop digital content strategies and oversee news training for stations. He now serves as v.p. and chief content officer at Louisville Public Media in Kentucky, where he also serves as p.d. of WFPL, the news/talk station in LPM’s portfolio, and hosts Morning Edition. Before joining LPM, he was director of content and media at Iowa Public Radio and chief content officer for Michigan Public Media in Ann Arbor. He previously hosted a talk show distributed by NPR.
  • Knell talks Connected Cars, federal funding and more with Nieman

    When it comes to explaining the relationship between NPR, its stations and the federal government, “part of me wants to do like a Schoolhouse Rock video of ‘how a bill becomes law,’” says NPR President Gary Knell in a Q&A with the Nieman Journalism Lab. Knell argues that federal support for public broadcasting serves the public interest by educating the public “so that we can make correct decisions and our political leaders can make correct decisions.” The interview also covers NPR’s promotion of Kinsey Wilson to chief content officer, the network’s development of in-car apps for Ford and other subjects.
  • Pre-execution hit talk show from China, available via PBS International, to air in Britain

    A Chinese show featuring interviews with death-row prisoners just before execution has become a hit in that country, with 40 million viewers each Saturday night. Now scenes from the show, titled Dead Men Talking (available via PBS International), will be shown in Britain for the first time in a new BBC 2 documentary, reports The Daily Mail. The show has made a celebrity of interviewer Ding Yu. “Some viewers might consider it cruel to ask a criminal to do an interview when they are about to be executed,” she told the paper. “On the contrary, they want to be heard.
  • YouTube newcomers snag hosting duties for PBS's first Online Film Festival

    PBS has made an interesting selection for hosts for its first-ever Online Film Festival, reports GigaOm, two newbies “who have between them one mustache and barely six months of YouTube experience.” Yet despite their lack of expertise, Stephen Dypiangco and Patrick Epino have managed to create a popular YouTube channel, called the National Film Society, get press credentials to cover Sundance and cement a partnership with Filmmaker Magazine. “We were looking for someone with a really unique voice, someone you wouldn’t necessarily associate with PBS,” Jayme Swain, senior director of PBS Interactive, told GigaOm. The duo’s YouTube presence is “still a nascent channel, but have a reputation and a following, and they brought in a new perspective for us.”
  • State funding cuts could have big impact on rural radio in Va.

    Newsleader.com takes a look at how state funding cuts would affect a community radio network in rural Virginia, where in some areas the stations provide the only daily source of news for residents. “If we get a big funding cut, there’re just so many things that we wouldn’t be able to offer,” says Diane Buzzard, g.m. of the Allegheny Mountain Radio Network. “We wouldn’t be able to stay on the air every day. We’d probably have to limit our news feed, we’d probably have to eliminate our part-time news reporters and maybe our full-time news reporter. It would be devastating.”
  • CPB ombud presses WAMU for more info about journalist-donor events

    In his latest post, CPB Ombudsman Joel Kaplan presses WAMU in Washington, D.C., for more transparency about interactions between its donors and journalists. “The public deserves more from WAMU,” Kaplan wrote. “It deserves to know exactly what is going on in its newsroom and at its donor conferences.” Kaplan urged the station to release transcripts, records of attendees and other information related to such events, and he suggested the station offer video streams of any future panel discussions that its journalists put on for donors, such as a recent “Meet the Producers Breakfast.” Kaplan’s focus on WAMU comes after the resignation of News Director Jim Asendio, who objected to the Meet the Producers Breakfast and refused to attend.
  • WNET, PBS sue new streaming TV subscription service Aereo

    WNET and PBS are among broadcasters that filed one of two copyright infringement lawsuits Thursday (March 1) in Manhattan federal court against Aereo, a TV service that streams over-the-air channels to web-enabled devices, reports PaidContent.org, a news site covering the economics of digital content. Aereo, backed by media mogul Barry Diller, announced last month that it would use “proprietary remote antenna and DVR” technology to enable subscribers, for $12 a month, to watch over-the-air broadcasts on their smart phones, tablets and computers. The service, set to launch March 14 in Brooklyn, is similar to the recent ivi TV (Current, Oct.
  • WGBH to test Mobile Emergency Alert System on Monday

    WGBH, one of four public stations selected last year to pilot a Mobile Emergency Alert System (M-EAS) project funded by CPB and LG Electronics, will test the system on Monday (March 5), according to TV Technology. WGBH will send tornado emergency information to mobile devices via text, video, audio, maps and photos, using the mobile DTV standard ATSC M/H. The test will occur at 10:30 a.m. Eastern. Participating are KLVX in Las Vegas, and Alabama station WBIQ in Birmingham and WAIQ in Montgomery.
  • At APTS summit, public TV remembers which way ‘up’ is

    “What a difference a year makes,” Patrick Butler, president of the Association of Public Television Stations, told the crowd at the group’s Public Media Summit on Feb. 27 in Arlington, Va. Last year at this time, the House of Representatives had just voted to eliminate all federal funding for public broadcasting. Since then pubcasters have notched several victories, including protecting the fiscal 2011 appropriation for CPB to $445 million. In recognition of Butler’s performance during his first year, the APTS Board of Trustees gave him an extended standing ovation. APTS renamed its longtime Capitol Hill Day public TV political advocacy gathering as the Summit, which included sessions on how both TV and radio stations are “Moving from ‘Nice’ to ‘Necessary,’” and appearances by former U.S.
  • "The Interrupters" most popular doc of 2011 with awards, festivals, critics

    The Interrupters topped the P.O.V. blog’s exhaustive list of the best documentaries of the past year, based on lists from critical acclaim, documentary festivals, industry organizations and online voting. The Kartemquin Films production, which  recently ran on Frontline, tells the stories of three individuals in Chicago who literally interrupt situations on the streets that are brewing into violent confrontations. Don’t miss the blog’s cool graphic tracking dozens of films.