Nice Above Fold - Page 542

  • Oklahoma legislators introduce two bills to zero out pubcasting funds to OETA

    Two Oklahoma lawmakers are proposing ending funding for Oklahoma Educational Television Authority, the pubTV network based in Oklahoma City, reports the Tulsa World newspaper. Senate Bill 1689 would end state money for “public media or establishing a statewide educational television system,” and OETA is the only Oklahoma public media to receive such funding. Pubradio KOSU and KGOU receive funding indirectly through their university licensees schools, not through appropriations. House Bill 3039 would end OETA funding over the course of five years. “If that money were to go away, this would be a very different operation, and it would not — could not — continue to be a statewide operation,” said John McCarroll, OETA executive director.
  • CPB will seek operator to develop American Archive; director leaves project

    Having lost its digital projects fund last year, CPB lacks the money to develop the American Archive much further, according to Mark Erstling, senior v.p. The next step is to find an outside institution to adopt and support creation of the proposed archive of public stations’ historic audio, video and films. That helps explain why professional archivist Matthew White left CPB Jan. 13 after two years as executive director. “It was very clear to him that things were going to change significantly,” Erstling says, and White accepted an offer to lead a “significant” archiving project abroad. White could not be reached for comment.
  • Idaho PTV faces "loss of service" in wake of capital funding cut

    Idaho Public Television needs funding for capital equipment purchases, General Manager Peter Morrill told the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee of the state legislature Friday (Jan. 27). The network has not received its usual state appropriation for equipment for the past three years, reports the Spokesman-Review, and is asking for $1.5 million. “Our operating model is not sustainable with current capital funding levels,” Morrill told members. “Continued deferral of equipment repairs and maintenance will lead to loss of service.” The governor’s budget recommendation for IPTV for next year calls for a 0.5 percent increase in general funds. For much more on the loss of capital equipment funding across the system, see the Jan.
  • Is "Downton" creating online pirates?

    Obsessive Downton Abbey fans are turning into programming pirates, reports Salon, poking around in what it calls “some dark corner of the Internet” to find episodes that have already run on Britain’s ITV but not yet on Masterpiece. When the writer of the piece, John Sellers, confessed to Downton actor Hugh Bonneville (the Earl of Grantham) that he’d watched the Downton Christmas special online, Bonneville replied: “I wish you hadn’t told me you watched it illegally. That’s really pissing me off. Shame on you. Be ashamed.” PBS viewers are still awaiting that episode, which is set to air in February.
  • W.V. pubcaster cutting programming due to budget squeeze, director tells lawmakers

    Dennis Adkins, West Virginia Public Broadcasting executive director, told state legislators that state funding reductions and loss of corporate underwriting have forced the station to make programming cuts, reports the Charleston Gazette. Speaking to lawmakers on Thursday (Jan. 26), Adkins said further program cutbacks may be necessary. “We’re seeing erosion in our ability to provide a quality public broadcasting product to the citizens of West Virginia,” Adkins told members of the House Finance Committee. “To put it bluntly, our expenses are outpacing our revenues.” State appropriations to pubcasting in West Virginia have dropped 9 percent over the past two fiscal years, and corporate underwriting is off 17 percent in the last year.
  • KPCC places billboard next door to rival KPFK

    Has KPCC “punked” fellow pubradio station KPFK with a “billboard prank”? So says an item on OC Weekly’s Navelgazing blog written by Gustavo Arellano, a reporter for the paper who has also appeared on both stations in southern California. KPCC, an NPR member station, has erected a bold orange billboard on the the roof of building right next door to KPFK, a Pacifica outlet, that reads: “Ideas, not ideology.” Perhaps a poke at left-leaning Pacifica? UPDATE: Craig Curtis, program director at KPCC radio, tells Current that the placement was a “complete coincidence — although I’m sure people may not believe that.”
  • PBMA rebrands as Public Media Business Association, launches new website

    The Public Broadcasting Management Association (PBMA) on Thursday (Jan. 26) announced a full rebranding of the organization, which serves financial, human resources, legal, information systems and administrative managers of public TV and radio stations. It’s slightly twisting the current PBMA acronym into PMBA: the Public Media Business Association, positioning itself as the “go-to” association “focused on delivering programs and services that enhance the efficiency, effectiveness and economics of public media,” the McLean, Va.-based group said in a press release. “The county’s need for public media is greater than ever, but public media stations face severe economic and funding challenges,” said PMBA Board Chair Tom Livingston.
  • Republican gives OPB $50,000, citing "Moyers and Company"

    Oregon Public Broadcasting received an unexpected $50,000 gift on Wednesday (Jan. 25), from a longtime donor who has “given consistently but nothing on that level,” OPB President Steve Bass told Current. And here’s a twist: The contributor told an OPB staffer that he’s a registered Republican, and that one of the programs he especially enjoys is Moyers and Company, the latest show from veteran newsman Bill Moyers, widely considered a progressive voice. Several pubTV execs recently told the New York Times that PBS declined to carry Moyers’s latest program, which is distributed by American Public Television, because PBS “did not want to realign itself with Mr.
  • Pubcasting pic o' the week

    Is this a great photo or what? That’s Terry Gross, host of WHYY’s Fresh Air, alongside larger-than-life political satirist Stephen Colbert. In case you missed her appearance on The Colbert Report, here’s the link on Fresh Air’s Tumblr.
  • Months later, FCC still "obtaining additional information" on sale of WMFE-TV to Daystar

    Nine months after PBS member station WMFE-TV in Orlando announced its sale, the Federal Communications Commission has yet to approve its transfer to Community Educators of Orlando, the local entity representing religious broadcaster Daystar. Orlando Weekly reports that in a Dec. 7, 2011, letter, Michael Perko, spokesperson for the FCC Media Bureau, told U.S. Rep. Kenny Marchant (R-Texas), whose includes Daystar headquarters, that the FCC had “recently completed a preliminary evaluation of the WMFE-TV assignment application . . . as well as the related informal objections,” and “it was necessary to obtain additional information” before making a final decision. Daystar told Orlando Weekly in a statement, “We don’t comment on station acquisitions, but we are excited about all the growth Daystar is experiencing and thankful for the opportunities God has given us to spread the good news of Jesus Christ around the world.”
  • WPSU developing Editorial Integrity Advisory Committee as it navigates scandal coverage

    In reaction to the Penn State University athletic department’s ongoing sex abuse scandal, WPSU General Manager Ted Krichels is organizing an Editorial Integrity Advisory Committee for the station, which is licensed to the college, reports CPB Ombudsman Joel Kaplan. “WPSU, like many public broadcasting outlets, is inextricably tied to the university where it is located, and which also holds its license,” Kaplan writes; WPSU is also a news operation. “There is no indication that any pressure was brought to bear” on the newsroom over the scandal coverage, Kaplan notes, “but there is a fear inside WPSU that there is a public perception that WPSU is an auxiliary arm of Penn State.”
  • Public Insight Network broadens work to include original reporting

    The Public Insight Network from American Public Media is starting up its own news unit to generate original reporting, according to Nieman Journalism Lab, drawing on its massive database of some 130,000 self-identified news sources. “One of the things we learned early on,” Linda Fantin, director of the PIN initiative, told Nieman, “is the amount of intelligence and amazing insights and stories that people have shared with us quickly overwhelm a journalist’s ability to get that information out there.” The first project will be monthlong “virtual road trip” to survey Americans on whether presidential candidates reflect their values.
  • NewsHour's translation project presents State of the Union in more than six languages

    The PBS NewsHour’s election-year translation project kicked off with President Obama’s State of the Union address on Tuesday (Jan. 24). Online transcriptions of his speech are now available in its entirety in Arabic, French, Italian, Japanese, Polish and Portuguese; portions of the address are there in traditional Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, German, Korean and Spanish.
  • Random House and Sesame launch ebook initiative

    Random House Children’s Books and Sesame Workshop are partnering on a new digital publishing initiative focusing on early learning and reading readiness. Titles from the Random House Children’s Books Sesame Street library will be available as ebooks for the first time beginning today (Jan. 25) with Elmo Says Achoo! and Elmo’s Breakfast Bingo. An additional 19 titles will be released this spring. Several titles will include audio narration by Sesame Street’s Bob McGrath, who has performed on the program since its premiere in 1969. A joint press release said the program expands the Random House-Sesame Workshop partnership that has been ongoing for more than 40 years.
  • A tempest in a "Downton" teapot?

    Britain’s Daily Mail reports that producers of the ITV drama — and current Masterpiece smash hit — Downton Abbey “are less than happy after an American TV network launched a collection of somewhat tasteless themed jewelry.” PBS had featured several items similar to what Downton characters wear on its ShopPBS website. Supposedly, producers Carnival Films “were forced to call in lawyers” in an attempt to stop PBS “from naming jewelry after the show’s most famous character, Lady Mary Crawley.” Carnival, “which has approved an official range of Downton DVDs and books, was horrified to find that PBS, its broadcast partner, was cashing in on the show’s popularity,” the paper wrote.