Nice Above Fold - Page 596

  • Chicago's only noncom Latino radio station up for sale

    WRTE/90.5 FM in Chicago, the city’s only noncom Latino radio station, is for sale, and Chicago Public Media is interested. WRTE’s licensee, the National Museum of Mexican Art, is parting with the youth-run station, known locally as Radio Arte, and the building housing it due to budget woes. Museum President Carlos Tortolero tells WBEZ: “The funding, especially in radio, is going south. We have a building that’s costing us money. We tried to borrow some money to do some things and [banks] are saying, ‘No, no. You can’t.’ The banks are looking at us and saying, ‘Hey, you have to get rid of some of this stuff.’”
  • P.O.V. opens call for entries

    The call for entries for the 2012 season of P.O.V. is now open. Series producer Yance Ford offers some tips for filmmakers here.
  • New first for NPR's Andy Carvin: the Twitter interview

    “[W]hat could be more dull than two Twitter geeks with their heads buried in their laptops as the interview subject patiently waits for us to type?” writes NPR’s Andy Carvin in this detailed account of his May 19 Twitter interview with Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser and author of the speech that President Obama delivered on U.S. policy on the Middle East. The ground-breaking interview may have been visually dull to those who watched it on video stream, but the tactics that Carvin used to solicit and ask questions, and NPR’s rationale for allowing him to accept the White House’s invitation to host the chat, turned out to be of great interest to Twitter heads and journalists.
  • WTF, an insider's emotional journey through world of comedy, comes to public radio

    WTF with Marc Maron, a twice-weekly podcast that regularly ranks among iTunes’ most popular, has been adapted for public radio broadcast. The 10-episode series features startlingly honest conversations between Maron and top comedians and entertainers, including Judd Apatow, Conan O’Brien and Louis C.K. Maron launched the podcast during a dark time in his life — in fall 2009, when he was in the midst of a divorce and had just lost his job at now-defunct Air America. “I was in a very bad place,” Maron said. “My career was relatively washed up. I was broke. My heart was broken.
  • WDSC in Daytona may end PBS programming July 1, could close altogether

    WDSC, the PBS affiliate at Daytona State College, is in jeopardy of closing, the local News-Journal is reporting today (May 19), further complicating the already messy pubTV situation in Florida, with WMFE-TV’s sale to a religious broadcaster pending in Orlando (Current, April 18). Administrators say the college has already cut the $250,000 for PBS programming for the next fiscal year and is also struggling to pay $1.5 million overall to run the station.
  • Director experiences real Seoul at this year's INPUT

    “Four jam packed days, dozens of films, discussions, debates, brutal honesty, humor mixed with painfully serious subject matter, and a delirious evening of Korea’s top musical acts in an eclectic concert in our honor and broadcast live.” That’s how Judy Erlich, director of the critically acclaimed Most Dangerous Man in America doc, describes the recent pubTV INPUT Festival in Seoul on ITVS’s Beyond the Box blog. “INPUT is all about culture clash and aesthetic variance,” Erlich writes. “What works in Denmark may be completely inappropriate in Indonesia. The Islamic young woman sitting next to me literally covered her eyes during the opening event, which included a rather explicit sexual how-to sequence.”
  • Be More Award goes to Masterpiece's Rebecca Eaton

    ORLANDO — Masterpiece Executive Producer Rebecca Eaton is this year’s “Be More” Award recipient. Eaton has increased the icon show’s audience by 54 percent over last year, and was named one of Time magazine’s 2011 100 most influential people in the world. During the presentation at its national meeting here, PBS President Paula Kerger said Eaton “has committed herself to the highest standards of excellence and artistic expression for public broadcasting and has shepherded in a new generation of loyal viewers.” Previous recipients include docmaker Ken Burns, Sesame Workshop founder Joan Ganz Cooney, newsmen Jim Lehrer and Bill Moyers and children’s champion Fred Rogers.
  • NewsHour's O'Brien to conduct live Space Shuttle interview

    PBS NewsHour science correspondent Miles O’Brien will conduct a live interview with Commander Mark Kelly and the crew of the Space Shuttle Endeavour at 6 a.m. Eastern Thursday (May 19). Questions are coming from the public via YouTube, Twitter and Google’s Moderator service. So far 2,254 people have submitted 1,839 questions and cast 13,421 votes for which to ask. The interview will run live on the NewsHour’s website and YouTube channel. Inquiring minds (well, at least one Current reporter) want to know: Will O’Brien ask, ahem, that infamous question, whether astronauts fool around in space? “Negative,” he replies.
  • KCET plans on-air fundraiser for Japan disaster relief

    KCET in Los Angeles has received a waiver from the Federal Communications Commission to air a live pledge show for Japan earthquake and tsunami relief. A spokesperson for the FCC said about a dozen such waivers have been granted. The fundraiser is from 8 to 11 p.m. Pacific May 24. It will feature guests from the Japanese-American community including actor George Takei, and a pre-taped interview with Gene Otani, lead anchor for Newsline, NHK’s weeknight English-language newscast. Also, on May 18, Otani will answer live questions via Ustream moderated by KCET’s editor-in-chief of blogs Zach Behrens that will run on KCET.org
  • PBS Digital Learning Library graduates into larger LearningMedia

    ORLANDO — PBS and WGBH today announced PBS LearningMedia, the next generation of the PBS Digital Learning Library. It’ll be a digital media platform to “help re-imagine classroom learning, transform teaching, and more creatively engage students,” the network said in a statement. “Digital media content – so pervasive in the lives of children – has the potential to dramatically change the way students learn and participate in a global society,” PBS President Paula Kerger said. Including content from more than 55 member stations, independent producers and public institution partners, the first phase of development will combine existing infrastructure models from the PBS Digital Learning Library (formerly EDCAR) with local services from WGBH’s Teachers’ Domain and its partners, WNET/New York and Kentucky Educational Television (KET).
  • Education Department approves $27.3 million for Ready to Learn

    Ready to Learn is safe. On Monday (May 16) the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and PBS expressed appreciation to Congress and the U.S. Department of Education for providing $27.3 million in continued funding for the initiative, which helps public television stations develop educational resources on-air, online and on the ground that provide young children – especially those from low-income backgrounds – with fundamental reading and math skills. The project was endangered in recent budget rounds.
  • Australian newspaper hits back at ad breaks inserted into "PBS NewsHour" Down Under

    ORLANDO — PBS’s intention to insert underwriting spots into programming on a test basis beginning this fall, creating major buzz at its National Meeting here this week, comes just as an Australian newspaper is editorializing against new commercial breaks in PBS NewsHour on that country’s SBS network. Those interruptions, which began earlier this month, prompted The Australian to write, “Not only is NewsHour now being interrupted with totally inappropriate advertising, but SBS appears to be amateurishly clipping its editorial segments in order to accommodate the ads.” The paper also called NewsHour SBS’s “most valuable program.”
  • New mindset requires new habits: listen, earn trust, partner-up

    The professionals who work to engage public media groups in their communities are still learning what it takes. In a series of articles, associates of the Wisconsin-based National Center for Media Engagement will lay out what they’ve learned. Executive Director Charles Meyer begins the series. I’ve always been blessed with a fast metabolism. Sadly, I’ve reached an age at which my metabolism has decided to slow things down. So I have to choose: stay the course and accept the consequences or change a lifetime habit of eating anything I want. Intellectually, it’s easy. I know what I need to do: eat less, exercise more.
  • Surprise! Another GOP governor wants to eliminate state pubcasting funds

    A proposal by Maine Gov. Paul LePage (R) to zero-out nearly $2 million in annual funding for the Maine Public Broadcasting Network prompted hearings in the statehouse today. Citizens who testified before the Senate appropriations committee overwhelmingly opposed the measure. According to local news accounts, LePage’s proposal surprised even top Republican lawmakers when it landed last week. The governor is offering to restore public funding of gubernatorial campaigns, which he targeted in an earlier version of the two-year budget, by completely eliminating MPBN’s annual subsidy. The Times Record of Brunswick, which published an op-ed today slamming the governor’s trade-off, describes it as a “double-dare: Squawk too much about my MPBN cut and I’ll simply go back to Plan A and reinstate my proposed Clean Elections funding cut.
  • PBS previews new primetime architecture for PTPA in Orlando

    Programmers got a look at PBS’s new fall primetime architecture at the Public Television Programmers Association meeting taking place today (May 16) in Orlando, Fla., just before the PBS National Meeting. PBS’s John Wilson, s.v.p and chief programmer, and Shawn Halford, senior director of program scheduling, said the changes are taking place to better serve viewers looking for similar shows, build a larger potential membership base, create a stronger selling proposition for audience-focused underwriters and better leverage marketing and promotion. Schedule changes include transitioning Nature from Sundays to Wednesdays, moving Frontline later on Tuesdays after December pledge and shifting Independent Lens and P.O.V.