Nice Above Fold - Page 531
Daniel del Solar, 71, believer in progressive public media
Daniel del Solar, 71, a Chilean-American media activist, poet and photographer who headed training for CPB in its early days and later managed countercultural stations in San Francisco and Philadelphia, died Jan. 13 in Oakland, Calif. He had prostate cancer. Del Solar served as director of training and development at CPB in the late 1970s, during a period of active recruitment and training of ethnic-minority professionals. He later became g.m. of San Francisco’s KALW-FM from 1985 to 1992 and of Philadelphia’s WYBE-TV from 1992 to 1995. “What he did at CPB was exceedingly important,” says Nina Serrano, a longtime friend and volunteer producer at Pacifica Radio’s KPFA in Berkeley.Indie docs lose viewers, carriage as they’re moved to Thursdays
The shift of Independent Lens from Tuesdays to Thursdays this season has created ratings and carriage woes for the indie-doc showcase.Alvarado as he exits: 'Change cannot be a complaint'
"... The architecture of public media has to be reimagined immediately or the millennials will build their own parallel universe separate from the public broadcasting universe their Boomer grandparents live in...."
Is "KONY 2012" a documentary?
P.O.V.’s blog has an interesting analysis of the viral phenomenon of KONY 2012, the 30-minute film on Ugandan guerrilla group leader Joseph Kony that’s been viewed more than 80 million times since it was posted on YouTube and Vimeo on March 5, written by guest blogger Heather McIntosh of Documentary Site. Invisible Children, the advocacy organization that produced the film, “labels KONY 2012 a documentary, and it is one that falls squarely into the propaganda/persuasion traditions developed in the work of Frank Capra, Leni Riefenstahl, and Pare Lorentz,” McIntosh writes. “But KONY 2012 pushes the boundaries of these traditions.NBC didn't think "Downton" would be a hit
NBC turned down Downton Abbey, which is produced by NBCUniversal’s Carnival Films in London, “believing that American audiences wouldn’t have the appetite for a very British historical drama set in a country manor in Edwardian England,” reports the Philadelphia Inquirer. An NBC official told the paper that the decision was made under previous NBC leadership, and it’s pleased that sister company NBCUniversal found success with the show, which was picked up by Masterpiece on PBS. But that exec acknowledged that even the current NBC brass could have overlooked Downton’s potential. “The official said it was hard to imagine any network — including PBS — thinking Downton would become a hit,” the paper said."Michael Eric Dyson Show" senior producer says host has left program
The Michael Eric Dyson Show will go off the public radio airwaves at the end of the month, and its host has already left the program, reports the Journal-isms blog. “There’s something else potentially in the works, but the show as it exists now is about to end,” Carla Wills, senior producer, told the blog. “The contract was over. We didn’t do another round of funding.” Wills said Dyson was increasing his appearances on MSNBC’s Martin Bashir Show as well as continuing his speaking engagements and teaching at Georgetown University. Guest hosts will fill in for the final shows. LaFontaine Oliver, Dyson’s producer and g.m.
Media watchdog aims to air out dispute between KUOW and antiabortion group
A media-oversight nonprofit in Seattle will hold a hearing later this month to consider an antiabortion group’s allegation that KUOW-FM, the city’s all-news pubradio outlet, aired an inaccurate report about the group last year and fell short of correcting its missteps. The complaint by the Vitae Foundation centers on an April 2011 story by reporter Meghan Walker about the foundation’s billboard advertising campaign for a website, YourOptions.com, that discusses choices available to women with unplanned pregnancies. The story began with a Planned Parenthood representative discussing the YourOptions website but did not include comment from anyone with Vitae. Deborah Stokes, Vitae’s c.o.o.,Update: Chinese execution talk show available via PBS International is abruptly canceled
A pre-execution interview show on death row in China, set to air as a documentary on the BBC next week and available via PBS International, has abruptly been canceled by the Chinese producer, ABC News is reporting. Legal TV, the station in Henan province that produced and broadcast the show for the last five years, confirmed to ABC News it has been canceled, effective immediately, due to “internal problems.” The program has a viewership of some 40 million.CPB, PBS join to offer free educational apps in underserved communities
CPB and PBS are collaborating on free educational apps that will be available at Head Start centers, member stations and other organizations in underserved communities, the two announced Thursday (March 8). The outreach is part of Ready to Learn, with funding from the U.S. Department of Education. Recent research shows that access to computers, smartphones and tablets is much less prevalent in low-income households, which limits children’s exposure to educational applications, the two said in the announcement. This program will work to increase access to educational mobile content for children from low-income families at community organizations equipped with mobile and tablet devices.Sutton: View stations' situations in "context of market forces"
Writing on his blog, public radio consultant John Sutton argues that the inability of some stations to support themselves can be blamed on national organizations more concerned about their own priorities than those of stations. “NPR’s primary goal these days is to further grow its direct-to-listener offerings and audience,” he writes. “CPB is now primarily funding projects that will help it get funded again. Neither organization is doing much to help stations become more self-sufficient in the open marketplace. That’s what they have to want in order to help stations.” Sutton’s post was inspired by our coverage of the Public Media Futures Forum, held last month in Washington, D.C.Test Post With Custom Fields
This is just a test…Breitbart's "exclusive" Obama video has been on Frontline's site since 2008
Before his death on March 1, conservative online publisher Andrew Breitbart hinted that he had video of a 1990 speech given by then-Harvard student Barack Obama that Breitbart said was evidence of President Obama’s longtime radical political beliefs. It was posted on his site Breitbart.com Wednesday (March 7) as an “exclusive.” But it turns out the footage was shot by Boston’s WGBH and has been on the Frontline website since 2008. Frontline provides details in a web post, along with unedited footage.Well-schooled in start-up culture, Corey Ford returns to public media
Public Media Accelerator, the incubator launched in December with a $2.5 million grant from the Knight Foundation, will be led by a former Frontline producer who left the field to immerse himself in the technology start-up culture of Silicon Valley.Corey Ford earned production credits on 17 Frontline films before earning his M.B.A. at Stanford University. His interest in multidisciplinary approaches to technology innovation led him to take a fellowship at Stanford’s Institute of Design, and from there he was recruited to direct the runway for Google Chairman Eric Schmidt’s venture capital fund, Innovation Endeavors. Ford is now bringing that experience back to public media as director of Public Radio Exchange’s latest initiative to spur innovation, the Public Media Accelerator (PMX).WHYY hires Pulitzer-winning cartoonist for NewsWorks
NewsWorks, WHYY’s collaborative website covering Philadelphia-area news, has hired Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist Tony Auth, formerly of the Philadelphia Inquirer. Chris Satullo, WHYY’s v.p. for news and civic engagement announced Wednesday (March 7) that starting in April, Auth will be “digital artist in residence” for NewsWorks and WHYY. Auth’s national political cartoons will not be published on NewsWorks but will continue to be available through syndication. Auth’s residency will be funded in part through a grant from the Thomas Skelton Harrison Foundation.PBS announces second web-based arts program
PBS is launching on March 14 a new series on YouTube, Idea Channel, which it calls an “irreverent, personality-driven” project that “examines the unique places where art, culture, technology and the Internet intersect.” Hosting will be Mike Rugnetta, a composer, programmer and performer who is part of MemeFactory, a three-man performance group exploring Internet culture. Off Book, another PBS web-only series focusing on experimental and nontraditional forms of artistic expression, began its second season Wednesday (March 7). Off Book launched in fall 2011 as part of the PBS Arts initiative and over the course of 13 episodes generated more than a half million views on YouTube, PBS said.
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