Nice Above Fold - Page 463

  • Overnight and online, WDET turns listeners on to Detroit's techno music

    WDET-FM in Detroit drew on the Motor City’s musical heritage by devoting its overnight broadcast schedule to Alpha, a new music block combining "electronic and progressive soul music."
  • William Miles, documentary filmmaker

    William Miles, an Oscar-nominated filmmaker and chronicler of the black experience, died May 12 in Queens, N.Y., from uncertain causes.
  • APTS chief sees renewed battle over CPB aid

    APTS President Patrick Butler is warning public broadcasters of continued threats to their federal funding this summer as Congress takes up work on appropriations for the next federal budget. During an appearance at the Public Media Business Association conference this morning, Butler recalled a private meeting with a key House Republican from Georgia who opposes federal aid to CPB. Rep. Jack Kingston, chair of the House appropriations subcommittee with oversight over CPB, told Butler that he plans to zero-out CPB funding. “He told me point blank, in January, that he was going to do everything he could to eliminate our funding,” Butler said during a PMBA breakfast meeting at the Washington Court Hotel in Washington, D.C.
  • Orlando Bagwell departing Ford Foundation, Cara Mertes to head its JustFilms

    Cara Mertes, a past executive director of American Documentaries Inc., ex-e.p. of its POV and former programmer for WNET’s Independent Focus, will succeed Orlando Bagwell to head up the Ford Foundation’s JustFilms, which backs social-justice documentaries. Mertes is currently director of the Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program and Fund, where she will remain until September. Bagwell is returning to filmmaking after more than eight years at the foundation, it announced today. He joined Ford in 2004 as a program officer and initially led its five-year initiative, Global Perspectives in a Digital Age, Advancing Public Service Media. He also directed grantmaking for public media, media rights and access, arts and culture and religious issues.
  • Downton producer ITV on a "spending spree" in U.S. reality production market, Variety reports

    Britain’s ITV, production home of Masterpiece titles Downton Abbey and Mr. Selfridge, is on a “spending spree” in the United States, according to Variety. ITV just bought a controlling stake in reality producer High Noon Entertainment (Cake Boss) for $39 million, and in December acquired 61.5 percent of Gurney Productions (Duck Dynasty). “Another U.S. buy is believed to be on the horizon as ITV Studios beefs up ITV Studios America,” Variety reports. ITV Studios also produces longtime pubcasting favorites Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple and Poirot. Variety notes that Mr. Selfridge “encapsulates a key part of what ITV wants to do more of — produce inhouse U.K.
  • Volunteers take back Radio Catskill

    WJFF Radio Catskill runs on hydroelectric power and the passion of its volunteers, who recently rallied to force a change in leadership.