Nice Above Fold - Page 631
Pubcasters selected as Peter Jennings Project fellows
Four public broadcasters are among the 2011 fellows for the Peter Jennings Project for Journalists and the Constitution March 4-6 in Philadelphia. The announcement of the 36 professional and six student fellows coincides with today’s (Jan. 20) posthumous induction of the longtime ABC News anchor into the Academy of Television Arts and Science Hall of Fame. Fellows include Carrie Johnson, Justice Department correspondent for NPR; Angela McKenzie, Initiative Radio; Amy Radil, KUOW Puget Sound Public Radio; and Paula Wissel, KPLU-FM. The annual conference allows journalists to explore constitutional issues.Ebert keeps his chin up, with a new one
Legendary movie critic Roger Ebert will wear a prosthetic chin on his new show, he revealed in his blog Wednesday (Jan. 19). “That’s not to fool anyone, because my appearance is widely known,” Ebert wrote, referencing his facial disfigurement from several surgeries following thyroid cancer. “It will be used in a medium shot of me working in my office, and will be a pleasant reminder of the person I was for 64 years.” The fitting and creation of the new chin took two years. “Two original models were too stiff, so that my head held upright reminded me of Erich von Stroheim in ‘Grand Illusion,’ ” he quipped.Governor proposes zeroing out South Carolina Educational Television support
South Carolina Republican Gov. Nikki Haley wants to cut $20 million out of the state’s budget, and $9.5 million of that would be funding to South Carolina Educational Television, according to The State newspaper. Haley announced the proposed reductions in her state of the state address Wednesday (Jan. 19). State money is about half of SCETV’s $19.8 million budget. South Carolina faces a budget gap of more than $800 million.
Public broadcasting backer elected to House Communications Subcommittee post
Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.), a longtime pubcasting supporter, is the new ranking member of the House Communications Subcommittee, the first woman to hold the title. The vote was 14 to nine among committee Democrats. She’s a co-chair of the Public Broadcasting Caucus.GOP group's "Spending Reduction Act" would end CPB, NEH, NEA support
Conservative House Republicans today (Jan. 20) presented a proposal to cut $2.5 trillion in federal funding over the next 10 years. The “Spending Reduction Act of 2011” would slash money to 55 agencies and programs, including zeroing out CPB, the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities. “House leaders are unlikely to adopt such radical cuts,” according to the Washington Post.Blumenauer: Pubcasting is "very cost effective"
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) has come to public broadcasting’s defense in a piece on the Hill’s Congress Blog today (Jan. 20). “National public broadcasting is very cost effective and an excellent example of a public-private partnership maximizing value for the taxpayer,” he writes. “The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) annually receives around .0001% of the federal budget. Cutting CPB’s funding would save Americans less than half a cent a day,” and would result in the loss of of PBS, “considered by the public to be the second-best use of taxpayer dollars, outranked only by defense spending.”
Did you miss the NETA conference?
Here’s the next best thing to being there: NETA has posted videos of many of the sessions.New Masterpiece Trust donations include portion for stations
Details are out on the new Masterpiece Trust, a funding initiative to mark the 40th anniversary of the PBS icon series. For $25,000, donors receive on-screen recognition on at least three programs, and part of their gift goes to their local PBS station. That part of the donation “would be determined jointly between the station and WGBH,” Masterpiece spokesperson Ellen Dockser told Current, “by considering the station’s involvement, the donor’s intent, and the goal of generating additional support for Masterpiece content.” More than $200,000 has been raised so far. The program is aiming for 40 donors, one for each year.Ford Foundation invests $50 million in social-issue filmmakers' projects
The Ford Foundation today (Jan. 19) announced a five-year, $50 million project to help fund social-issue filmmakers. JustFilms will invest $10 million a year over the next five years to back movie makers who often lack funding, the foundation said in a release. Heading up JustFilms will be respected documentarian Orlando Bagwell. Partnering are the CPB-backed ITVS and the Sundance Institute. The institute’s Sundance Film Festival kicks off Thursday. “With JustFilms, the Ford Foundation is mapping out new ways to connect the dots between storytelling, technology, and change,” ITVS President Sally Fifer told Current in a statement. “ITVS looks forward to continuing our work with Ford and independent filmmakers to inspire and connect people through television, new media and innovative outreach.”Triple play for music lovers of Ohio and Kentucky
WNKU, a Triple A public radio station broadcasting into Cincinnati on 89.7 FM, will triple its potential audience with the purchase of two commercial country stations in Ohio, WPFB in Middletown and WPAY, Portsmouth. The $6.75 million deal was signed today, according to Public Radio Capital’s Erik Langner, who brokered the deal for WNKU. The sale will be financed through tax-exempt bonds to be issued by WNKU licensee Northern Kentucky University. “Year after year, the number one complaint we hear is in regards to signal strength and reach,” said Chuck Miller, g.m. “WNKU will no longer be Greater Cincinnati’s best kept secret.”S.F. classical FM goes nonprofit in multistation trade
Classical Public Radio Network, based at KUSC in Los Angeles, has organized a new pubradio nonprofit to operate San Francisco’s 60-year-old classical stalwart, formerly commercial KDFC. In the multistation deal announced yesterday, KDFC maintains its air personalities and relationships with the San Francisco Symphony and San Francisco Opera. It moves to two new frequencies, while its former owner, Entercom Communications, redeploys its old 102.1 MHz signal to simulcast its classic rock station, KUFX in San Jose, which will move to S.F. The Los Angeles station acquired two frequencies for the new nonprofit — 90.3 MHz, formerly college station KUSF at the private University of San Francisco, and 89.9 MHz, formerly Christian music outlet KNDL, from Howell Mountain Broadcasting Co.Kansas budget cuts will hit pubcasters hard
The “massive cuts” proposed to Kansas public broadcasting will hit Smoky Hills Public TV and High Plains Public Radio the worst, reports the Hays Daily News. Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback proposed the reductions when in his 2012 budget last week. The state is facing a $550 million revenue shortfall. He wants to eliminate some $1.6 million in state aid typically budgeted pubcasting. The two stations in western Kansas receive a total of $750,000. High Plains would see its budget cut 20 percent; Smokey Hills, 23 percent.Nonprofit news heads pleased with Comcast-NBC deal to provide partnerships; PEG channels also spared
It’s official: As part of the Comcast-NBC merger approved yesterday (Jan. 18), some NBC stations will enter into cooperative arrangements with locally focused nonprofit news organizations, as Comcast had promised in December. By next January, at least five of the 10 owned-and-operated NBC stations will have inked cooperative arrangements with locally focused nonprofit news orgs, to be known as Online News Partners, that will provide reporting on issues of concern to each station’s market or region . On Jim Romenesko’s Poynter blog today, several heads of nonprof journalism ventures say this will validate their efforts, and, they hope, prompt more funding.NPR's mistake causes real pain, loss of trust
Tucson-based NPR correspondent Ted Robbins and Scott Simon, host of Weekend Edition Saturday, recall their reactions to erroneous NPR newscasts reporting the death of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords on Jan. 8. Both NPR journalists heard directly from friends and family members of the Arizona lawmaker, they tell Ombudsman Alicia Shepard, and had to explain on what basis NPR was reporting her death. The newscasts were based on inadequate sourcing; both Robbins and Simon testify to the “real, excruciating pain” caused by the mistake. When he learned the report was wrong, Simon called the Giffords family member who reached out to him.New Hampshire Public TV faces total state funding cut
New Hampshire Public Television’s funding will be debated Wednesday (Jan. 19) in a legislative hearing, the Foster’s Daily Democrat reports. A bill has been introduced that would ban the state’s university system from using state money to fund public TV. NHPTV President Peter Frid said 31 percent of its $8.8 million budget comes to it via that funding. Without that state support, Frid said, it would be impossible for the channel to function.
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