Nice Above Fold - Page 842

  • Vermont Public Radio eyes college station

    Vermont Public Radio has expressed interest in buying an FM channel from St. Michael’s College near Burlington, reports the Free Press. Trustees will consider the sale at an April 13 meeting.
  • Talks on infrastructure

    Top pubradio executives have begun discussing ideas for a comprehensive “back end” digital storage and distribution system that backers say could support a wide range of services and help stations and networks advance efficiently into new media. The execs, who met for the first time in Chicago Feb. 15, are taking up a proposal for a back-end system with the working name of the Digital Distribution Consortium. The DDC would store and catalog audio content from pubcasters and feed it to nonbroadcast platforms such as websites, iPods and cell phones. Some new-media thinkers in public radio argue for building websites that aggregate online content from various sources, but talks about “front end” strategies lead to touchy subjects such as revenue sharing, business models and public radio’s web identity.
  • John Inman: He's free

    John Inman, campy star of the Britcom Are You Being Served?, died Thursday at age 71, the London Times reported. His bustling, punning, happily effeminate shopclerk character rose from background to foreground in the hit BBC comedy in the 1970s and added U.S. fans through repeated play on public TV. Inman’s stereotyped behavior appalled gay liberationists at the time, but columnist Matthew Parris salutes “that lifesaving human compromise, the open secret,” which was kept through “a dark age” by Inman, Liberace and generations of sissies and drag queens who announced that homosexuals certainly seemed to be present … and turned “what was once seen as shame into light entertainment.”
  • Getler steps into the "News War"

    PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler sifts through responses to Frontline‘s “News War”–from viewers and media critics–and provides a forum for producers to respond. He also offers his own critique of the series: as long as Frontline examined how other news organizations failed to challenge the Bush Administration’s case for invading Iraq, Getler writes, producers should have been “a little more upfront” in examining their own record in the Nov. 2001 Frontline documentary, “Gunning for Saddam.” While prescient in some respects, “this program presented the equivalent of the Full Monty in making the hardliners’ case for war.”
  • Thanks for the Marine recruits, PBS!

    Marines and their supporters refuted criticism of the Feb. 21 program that PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler recently described as a “very well done testimonial and recruiting film masquerading as a documentary.” Getler’s critique was lost on one viewer who wrote: “Documentary or recruiting — whatever you want to call it, it was a pretty good show. I want to say ‘thank you’ in advance for the new ones who might sign with the Marine Corps just because they saw this show.”
  • NPR: Blog of the Nation

    NPR has launched a blog for Talk of the Nation. (Via Andy Carvin.)
  • The Sound of Young America: Public Radio Talent Quest: Let's Try Some Shit.

    Jesse Thorn promotes the Public Radio Talent Quest and comments on public radio’s approach to creating shows and cultivating talent. “New programming in public media is largely driven by pre-existing funding, which turns the development process backwards,” he writes. “Instead of having a great idea, or a great host, or a great producer and feeding it resources, we find a need or niche we decide to fill, then look for money, then actually build the creative elements. It’s anti-entrepreneurial and rewards sameness”
  • Texas Southern University Library to Receive Rare Speech Recordings

    The Pacifica Radio Archives will donate digital copies of recorded speeches by Malcolm X, Langston Hughes and others to Texas Southern University, reports Diverse. The Archives is donating recordings to universities as part of its Save Our Sound tour. (Via Rolas de Aztlan.)
  • "Public media content delivery is happening without us."

    Dennis Haarsager lays out his plea for a unified content delivery network in this blog post, which follows the February release of the Digital Distribution Committee report and commentary on that effort.
  • LA Times columnist critiques Frontline's "News War"

    Los Angeles Times media columnist Tim Rutten reacts to the third installment of Frontline‘s “News War,” which examined the ongoing turmoil at his newspaper.
  • Saluting Robert Schenkkan, public broadcasting pioneer

    The public stations in Austin, Texas, honored public broadcasting pioneer Robert Schenkkan over the weekend with a celebration of his 90th birthday, reports the Austin American-Statesman. Schenkkan helped to create Austin’s KUT-FM and KLRU-TV, and also defended public broadcasting against a defunding threat from President Nixon in the 1970s. “Bob Schenkkan is a hero to me and everybody else in public broadcasting,” said Jim Lehrer. “He gave us life and then he saved us.”
  • Larry Bensky will leave Pacifica

    Longtime Pacifica host and reporter Larry Bensky announced last week that he will retire from the network at the end of April. In his farewell letter, he cites frustration with the state of the network: “As I see it, the so-called ‘democratization’ of our local and national governance structure has not enhanced our effectiveness as a media outlet, or as a force for peace and social justice. In fact, despite the best intentions of a few people involved, Pacifica’s current governance and administration is a wasteful, counterproductive, and far from transparent distraction.”
  • Open Source’s Shiny New MacArthur Grant

    Public radio’s Open Source has received a $250,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to support its integration of radio and the Web. “If you’re not familiar with Radio Open Source, this is an approach worth at least serious consideration, and perhaps outright emulation, by broadcasters elsewhere,” writes Poynter blogger Amy Gahran.
  • PRPD starts blog

    The Public Radio Program Directors Association has started a blog.
  • Why no PayPal on public broadcasters' websites?

    Media consultant Amy Gahran asks why most public broadcasters don’t allow their web visitors to donate via PayPal: “Seems to me that Paypal [is] a friendlier, less intrusive way to start and build a donor relationship than forcing people to labor through a form and immediately become a member.”