Nice Above Fold - Page 820
Hawaii pubTV will profit from land sale
The Hawaii Public Television Foundation is selling land it bought in 2003 to house PBS Hawaii, reports the Honolulu Star Bulletin. The foundation bought the property in Waikiki for $2.4 million in 2003, and its value has since tripled. Technical issues and 60-foot zoning restrictions thwarted plans to create a broadcast center there. The foundation “will invest proceeds from the sale of the Waikiki property into a long-term home for PBS Hawaii, which has been unable to secure a long-term lease with the University of Hawaii for years,” reports the paper. The station has offered to renovate and expand its current home at the University’s Manoa campus in return for a 30-year lease.Burbank, freed from constraints of NPR
Promoting his new weeknight talk show on KIRO-AM, Luke Burbank tells the Seattle Times about “the freedom that was missing” as co-host of NPR’s Bryant Park Project: “Fifteen producers. A tight schedule. Doing segments he just wasn’t that into. ‘There was all this money on the line and then people were just messing with you so much,’ he says.”Bid to purify pubTV in France
French President Nicolas Sarkozy proposed to drop commercials on public TV in the country. Instead, Prime Minister Francois Fillon said public TV would receive proceeds of a new tax on commercial broadcasters ad sales and possibly an “infinitesimal” tax on Internet access and mobile phones, Bloomberg reported. The comments sent the stock price up nearly 10 percent for the biggest commercial channel, TF1. Bloomberg pointed out that Martin Bouygues, CEO of the largest investor in TF1, is godfather to the French president’s son Louis.
KOOP fire looks like arson
A fire that knocked Austin community station KOOP off the air last weekend was set intentionally, city fire officials say. The blaze caused more than $300,000 in damage. The station, which shares the 91.7 frequency with the University of Texas’ student-run KVRX, moved to its current location in 2006 after two fires at its previous home caused more than $4 million in damages, total, with the latter blaze destroying the building entirely. Neither of the earlier fires was ruled to be arson. KOOP has a history of infighting, though things had apparently stabilized, according to local reports. That said, Jim Ellinger, KOOP’s founder, ousted in 1999, said Monday that the station keeps burning down because of its “own bad karma.”Kids aren't learning much from digital products
A new report from the Joan Ganz Cooney Center on the children’s interactive media market finds that most digital products for kids do not utilize available research on children’s educational needs. “D is for Digital,” which focused on products for ages 3-11, found only two explicitly curriculum-based video games on the market. The report, which includes recommendations to the industry, researchers and policymakers, can be downloaded here.Patterson predicts death of regular TV schedule
“My prediction for 2008 will be that a tidal wave of innovation will converge and make TV on demand normal for the mainstream audience by early 2009,” writes Robert Patterson today in his blog. “As this happens, the money now invested in TV advertising and in supporting public TV will shift away – it will follow the audience.” In his first in a series of installments on the subject, he says this trend will cause the “slow but sure death” of many local stations, reminiscent of the music and newspaper industry. Patterson will be writing about what pubTV stations can do to survive the shift.
Luke Burbank's new talk show is "Too Beautiful to Live"
Too Beautiful to Live, a three-hour talk show featuring former NPR host Luke Burbank, debuted last night on Seattle’s KIRO-AM. “I’ve always thought I was a little too interesting for public radio, and a little too smart for commercial radio,” Burbank said in a BlatherWatch preview of the new show. Like Bryant Park Project, the NPR show that Burbank left less than a month ago, Too Beautiful won’t sound like NPR. “We’ll be real people talking about our lives,” Burbank said.NPR unveils new service for deaf and blind
Among other gadgets to be unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show, the San Jose Mercury News previews a new HD Radio media access technology that NPR plans to introduce at CES. UPDATE: Here’s the official news release describing the initiative and today’s live demonstration at CES.WAMC, NCPR resolve dispute over service to Lake Placid
WAMC in Albany, N.Y., agreed to drop its bid to build a new full-power radio station in territory already served by North Country Public Radio, according to the Albany Times-Union. The proposal, one of three vying at the FCC for the 91.7 frequency in Lake Placid, would have bumped NCPR’s translator service to the town.Consultants call for HD Radio Alliance to rethink its marketing strategy
A couple of blog postings about the marketing of HD Radio prompted vigorous debates about the viability of the nascent broadcast technology. Consultant Fred Jacobs critiques the concept behind the new ad campaign created for HD Radio Alliance stations, prompting a pre-holiday venting about all that is wrong with HD Radio. And Mark Ramsey, who predicted two years ago that HD would die on the vine without a better marketing plan, comments on the lackluster sales of HD Radio units [Via PRPD].Before the holidays, Talent Quest finalists wrapped up their pilots
PRX’s three Public Radio Talent Quest finalists completed their pilot episodes last month and posted them to the PRTQ website. Listen and review Al Letson’s State of the ReUNION, Rebecca Watson’s Curiosity Aroused and Glynn Washington’s Snap Judgment. The trio are competing for CPB series funding with each other and three aspiring pubradio hosts recruited by a separate team of producers.One respected news source recognizes another
A Sacramento Bee feature on Capital Public Radio’s KXJZ describes a respected, nonsensational news source with a growing local news staff (seven going on nine, plus four regular contributors) that placed fourth in 25-54 morning audience this spring.DirecTV picks up pubTV high-def channel
DirecTV and APTS said today the satellite broadcaster will carry local high-definition feeds of public TV stations starting next year, along with PBS video-on-demand programming and two national standard-def pubTV channels. The deal was approved yesterday by the APTS Board and faces votes by the PBS Board and the stations. DirecTV’s lineup includes 265 channels, includng more than 80 in HD. (News release via TVPredictions.com.)Ken Burns endorses Obama candidacy
The filmmaker and New Hampshire resident said he’s disappointed in Hillary Clinton’s negative tone and speculated she’s getting bad advice, AP reported.Four Silver Batons for pubcasting newsies
“Jihad: The Men and Ideas Behind Al Queda,” a documentary funded by CPB’s America at a Crossroads initiative, is one of four pubcasting programs to win 2008 duPont-Columbia Awards. During an awards ceremony to be held Jan. 16, the competition’s silver batons will also be presented to This American Life for a report by Alix Spiegel on the discrimination faced by a Muslim family after 9/11; NPR and Daniel Zwerdling for investigative reporting on the treatment of Iraq War veterans suffering from serious psychiatric post-traumatic stress injuries; and to producers of “Through Deaf Eyes,” a PBS documentary on the deaf community in the United States.
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