Nice Above Fold - Page 377

  • Thursday roundup: NPR drops Krulwich blog, VPR A Go Go is back

    Also: A head audio engineer at Oregon Public Broadcasting takes first prize in an Atari contest.
  • American Graduate announces winners of spoken-word competition

    Judges and the public have selected five winners of American Graduate’s Raise Up hip-hop and spoken word competition, which asked students to share original poems about challenges that lead students to drop out of high school. The winners will perform their poems live Sunday at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., at an event hosted by Glynn Washington, host and e.p. of public radio’s Snap Judgment. Each winner will also receive a $5,000 scholarship from the Will and Jada Smith Family Foundation. Raise Up is a partnership between CPB’s American Graduate initiative and San Francisco-based Youth Speaks, an organization that seeks to empower youth through writing and the spoken word.
  • Wednesday roundup: WQED looks for alums; St. Louis newsroom 'reborn' with Ferguson coverage

    Plus: Paula Poundstone says NPR listeners are "polite and fun. There’s not a lot of head-bangers."
  • David Candow, 'host whisperer' and public radio trainer, dies at 74

    David Candow, who was nicknamed “The Host Whisperer” for his work training hundreds of public radio hosts and journalists, died Thursday at his home in St. John’s, Newfoundland. He was 74. After a long career with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Candow started a consulting business in 1995 and became known throughout U.S. public radio for his extensive work training journalists in writing, editing, interviewing and delivery. In 2008, the Washington Post described him as “a kind of Henry Higgins to broadcasting’s Eliza Doolittles.” His death prompted an outpouring of remembrances throughout public radio from the hosts and reporters he helped over the years.
  • Walker leaves AIR for ITVS, Lapin departs Current, and other comings and goings in public media

    The Independent Television Service has hired Noland Walker, former executive editor of the Association of Independents in Radio’s Localore project, as senior content director.
  • Michigan's WKAR premieres four programs on television and radio

    In the performance and reality program Forte, a camera crew embedded with students gives viewers an inside look as young musicians prepare for a statewide festival.
  • PRPD honors Oliver, JazzWeek recognizes community stations, and more awards in public media

    PUBLIC RADIO PROGRAM DIRECTORS Craig Oliver, a public radio audience research consultant, received the Don Otto award for career contributions to the field. Oliver is the owner of Craig Oliver Consulting, which provides audience research and insight to Public Radio International, Greater Public, and several public radio stations. Oliver co-founded PRPD in 1987 and served as its first president. He was also president of the Radio Research Consortium, where he is now a board member. The Otto award is given annually by PRPD and Audience Research Analysis to recognize creative contributions to public radio. The award is named after Don Otto, the late former director of Eastern Public Radio, who was a mentor to the public radio programmers who started PRPD, including Oliver.
  • Monday roundup: Google Glass users can hear WBUR; Radiolab does hands-on journalism

    Plus: the FCC's to-do list grows, and podcast listening rivals radio among some consumers.
  • Eclectic24 goes from online to on-air in Santa Barbara

    An FM signal in Santa Barbara, Calif., recently acquired by KCRW, became the first broadcast home this week for Eclectic24, a previously web-only music stream produced by the Santa Monica–based station. KCRW broadcasts on two signals in the market and is using its former repeater at 106.9 FM as the first over-the-air outlet for Eclectic24. Since June, the station has also been simulcasting its Santa Monica station’s programming on 88.7 FM in Santa Barbara, which it purchased earlier this year. “We’ve never had the opportunity to do an all-music station in L.A., so when this opportunity came up, we grabbed it,” KCRW General Manager Jennifer Ferro said in an email.
  • Letter: "Greater Public is not retreating from digital"

    The president of Greater Public responds to a commentary.
  • Tiny news team at Lakeland Public Television fills gap left by commercial TV

    Station managers who worry they can’t afford to do news and public affairs have only to look at Lakeland Public Television in Bemidji, Minn., for inspiration. Since 1998, the station has produced a full half-hour weeknight news program. It currently operates on a yearly budget of just $375,000 to $400,000. Lakeland News is “structured like a commercial newscast, without commercials,” said Bill Sanford, the station’s chief executive and director of engineering. It was conceived after the station secured funding to evaluate how to reinvent itself. The study revealed that viewers wanted a local newscast to replace a commercial program that had disappeared after a spate of media consolidation.
  • Kansas City's KCPT picks up gauntlet to expand local news coverage

    Three years ago, a delegation from Kansas City Public Television, including the board chair, trekked out to San Diego’s KPBS to evaluate how that station’s extensive radio, television and online news operation might be adapted in Kansas City. A few months later, an influential visitor to Kansas City, PBS NewsHour anchor Jim Lehrer, urged KCPT leaders to act on their nascent ambitions to develop a locally focused news service for the community. Over dinner at the restaurant Lidia’s, Lehrer “kind of threw the gauntlet down,” recalled Kliff Kuehl, KCPT president, challenging executives to step up the station’s commitment to news coverage.
  • PBS responds to critical essay in latest Harper's Magazine

    A 12-page essay titled “PBS Self-Destructs: And What It Means for Viewers Like You” in the October issue of Harpers Magazine has prompted PBS to reply to the magazine and provide stations with talking points in anticipation of viewers’ responses. In the piece, writer Eugenia Williamson traces the history of the network with special attention to conservative interests that have buffeted PBS over the years. “[I]t doesn’t matter that the Republicans couldn’t defund PBS — they really didn’t need to. Twenty years on, the liberal bias they bemoaned has evaporated, if it ever existed to begin with,” Williamson writes.
  • St. Louis stations dedicate Public Media Commons

    Some 800 people attended the Sept. 13 dedication of Public Media Commons in St. Louis, a unique 9,000–square-foot outdoor media environment located between Nine Network and St. Louis Public Radio that features two-story–high video walls and 5-foot interactive touch screens. The $6 million project, funded by local contributions, is a collaboration among the stations and the University of Missouri-St. Louis. Construction began in November 2012. In his opening speech, Nine Network President Jack Galmiche called the commons “a symbol of who we are at 60 — forward-thinking, innovative, collaborative and committed to the power of a community that comes together to explore and improve the human experience.”
  • Newsman Bill Moyers sets January 2015 as retirement date — really

    Moyers, 80, has produced and anchored public-affairs programs and numerous specials on public television since 1971.