Nice Above Fold - Page 812

  • Mundt heads to Louisville

    Todd Mundt, until recently the director of content and media for upstart network Iowa Public Radio, is leaving for the Public Radio Partnership in Louisville, Ky. He’ll serve as director of new media strategies at the Partnership. Donovan Reynolds, president of the three-station network, previously worked with Mundt while head of Michigan Public Media in Ann Arbor.
  • New Hampshire pubTV splits from university

    New Hampshire Public Television is separating from the The University System of New Hampshire, reports the Portsmouth Herald News. USNH will continue to hold NHPTV’s broadcasting license, but the station’s board will take over management of day-to-day operations, including employment. Steps to make NHPTV, which has been part of the university since 1960, a separate nonprofit will take place over the next year. “This change is an opportunity for NHPTV to more nimbly adapt and respond to viewer needs and interests,” said station head Peter A. Frid, “and to provide targeted educational programs, partnerships and services to the greater New Hampshire community.”
  • Americans won't pay "twice" for TV?

    “There’s a fundamental difference between paying for radio and paying for a channel on TV,” writes syndicated columnist Ben Grabow. People don’t give money to PBS, he says, because “television, unlike radio, requires a subscription” and viewers don’t want to “pay twice” for a TV connection and content. Not accounting for digital over-the-air signals, Grabow writes, “a new television fresh from the box, unlike its black and white predecessor, offers nothing but fuzz” and “with local stations scaling back the analog signal, [it] all but requires a monthly cable or satellite fee.”
  • A better search tool

    “Public radio and TV has so much wonderful inventory–if I cannot find it, has it any value?” asks Robert Patterson in his blog. Writing from the FASTForward tech conference about “search-driven innovation,” he writes, “I have come to the conclusion that higher levels of search–enabling me to have it my way and to reflect back in real time my preferences to the producers–is going to be key to any system that public media rolls out.”
  • Live from Toledo

    “This is novel in public radio,” says classical DJ Greg Kostraba about his live, in-studio program on WGTE-FM 91 in Toledo, Ohio. “You have to go to big cities for programs like this,” he tells the Toledo Blade. Kostraba invites local and visiting musicians into a Steinway-equipped studio for the half-hour Live from FM 91, and he recently won a producer-of-the-year award from eTech, a state agency focused on education through technology. 
  • Silent phones and dire warnings at KMBH

    KMBH-FM in Harlingen, Texas, canceled its February fundraising campaign after receiving only six pledge calls in three days. “[T]his lack of financial support only aggravates our situation and may force us to make drastic changes on our service to the Rio Grande Valley,” KMBH warned visitors to its website. “[T]hose who HAVE NOT GIVEN THEIR FINANCIAL SUPPORT will not have any right to complain when their favorite radio station changes or even vanishes from the air!!!” The station, a joint licensee operated by the Catholic Diocese of Brownsville, has been under scrutiny of the local newspaper for lack of transparency in its governance and financial reporting.
  • "All white people's opinions are developed from Public Radio"

    The blog “Stuff White People Like” explains why Caucasians love public radio so much. Be sure to read the comments and follow the link to “Does Anything Make You Feel Instantly Older than Donating to Public Radio?”
  • EDCAR: ‘mother ship’ for school media

    Five years after the collapse of the CPB-backed OnCourse project, public TV is training for another run at the target. Which is: a comprehensive online digital library that gives teachers just the right video snippet, image, audio clip or interactive simulation that they can plug into a lesson ...
  • Baltimore’s WYPR takes heat for dismissing longtime host Marc Steiner

    Listeners are flooding the station with emails, posting angry comments and picketing the studios.
  • Boskin brings journalism background, KQED ties to CPB Board

    The San Francisco Chronicle profiles Chris Boskin, a member of the CPB Board with a long career in the magazine business. “I would call her a ‘Bay Area Republican,'” says Nick Donatello, chair of KQED’s board. “She’s not at the extreme. But because she has been close to the Washington scene, she knows how the game is played.”
  • Maryland county makes pitch for NPR HQ

    Officials in Montgomery County, Md., have made a pitch to lure NPR to the city of Silver Spring, reports the Gazette. NPR has narrowed its search for 400,000 square feet of office and studio space to Silver Spring and two sites in D.C. The network has said it will choose a location by the end of May.
  • Longtime PBS director dies at 86

    Kirk Browning, who directed 185 Live from Lincoln Center telecasts and other performance programs for PBS, died Feb. 10 at the age of 86, reports the New York Times. “Kirk contained the entire history of cultural television in our country,” said John Goberman, series producer of Lincoln Center.
  • Rick Steves' side gig: questioning pot policy

    Public TV traveler Rick Steves is host of Marijuana: It’s Time for a Conversation, a new 30-minute DVD produced by the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington State. The group has launched a multimedia campaign to question the fairness of U.S. policies regarding marijuana use and possession. “I’ve traveled throughout Europe and seen how they handle marijuana use and enforcement. I’ve learned that more thoughtful approaches can work,” Steves said in an ACLU release. “We need the understanding to go beyond ‘hard’ or ‘soft’ on drugs and find a policy that is ‘smart on drugs’.”
  • Twitter: great source for breaking news

    “I usually find out about breaking news on Twitter faster than any other network – broadcast or otherwise,” says NPR’s Andy Carvin in a Christian Science Monitor story on the micro-blogging application. Pubcasting consultant Rob Paterson, also a source in the Monitor story, has proposed that pubcasters set up Twitter Clubs to cover the March 4 Ohio primaries.
  • PubTV foodie has new column in Washington Post

    Andres Viestad, host of pubTV’s New Scandinavian Cooking with Andres Viestad, launched a new monthly column for the Washington Post today. The column, called “The Gastronomer,” is about “the science of everyday cooking,” according to the editor’s note. “Kitchen science tends to forget the enjoyment part of gastronomy; it can be far too demanding when it suggests how we can improve the way we cook,” writes Viestad in his first installment.