Nice Above Fold - Page 693

  • How to get the best quality out of the digital television standard

    PBS convened and CPB supported the PBS Quality Group’s evangelism for DTV quality in 2010 and 2011. The group, including tech specialists from stations, series producers and PBS, and consultants, held a series of workshops around the country, and members prepared these articles. Here are PDFs of the pieces published in Current. 1. Maintaining quality You can’t always ‘fix it in post.’ Station engineers, PBS join to identify best practices for DTV system. By Jim Kutzner, PBS. Published April 5, 2010. 2. HD image capture A welter of interacting choices. By Mark Schubin, production engineering consultant. Published May 3, 2010.
  • Moth Radio Hour returns with major foundation grant

    The MacArthur Foundation awarded a two-year, $200,000 grant for production of The Moth Radio Hour, a series of live story telling performances that debuted last year. Jake Shapiro, executive director of Public Radio Exchange, recently announced that PRX will begin releasing new episodes for public radio broadcasts next month. “The Moth Radio Hour is the realization of a ten-year long dream to bring The Moth to public radio,” said Lea Thau, executive and creative director of the New York-based nonprofit that stages popular story telling performances. “We have long felt that radio was the perfect medium for our stories to reach a wider audience, and we are grateful to the MacArthur Foundation for making this possible.”
  • Dyson show prepares for second pubradio launch

    Baltimore’s WEAA has begun piloting the Michael Eric Dyson Show, a midday talk show that is being reincarnated for a second try at pubradio syndication. CPB awarded $505,000 to WEAA last fall to create a new public radio home for Dyson after an earlier production by the African American Public Radio Consortium folded (Current, Oct. 13). After Dyson and the consortium parted ways, the group created a new program last fall, Upfront with Tony Cox, but it has suspended production to raise money, according to the show’s website. Dyson is a Georgetown University sociology professor, author and social critic who frequently appears on television talk shows.
  • A famous head, a lost mouth and the History Detectives

    Thanks to PBS’s History Detectives, Andrew Jackson’s mouth will be returned to his head. It’s part of an upcoming episode filmed on the USS Constitution, according to Military.com. Puzzled? Here’s a hint, a quote from the New York Times: “I believe in destiny, and I truly believe that somehow the mouth was meant to be held safe for these many years by the various members of a boating business family.” That should clear things up for you. Anyway, huzzah to the History Detectives team for the important find.
  • Home-brew beer law could endanger WYES fundraiser

    WYES in New Orleans is fretting over how the pending Louisiana Homemade Beer Law will affect its long-running International Beer T asting, a popular fundraiser that features home brews, according to the Times-Picayune. The bill would set limits on how much home-brewed beer can be transported from a household to beer tastings, and make the sale of homemade beer illegal. Randall Feldman, station manager, said he needs to know whether admission charged would be classified as a sale of home brew. Also, he noted, restrictions on amounts can be transported per household would result in a smaller festival. “I have many questions I want to follow up with,” he told the newspaper.
  • This Budd's for you, but not for the CBC

    CBC Radio has canned Barbara Budd, co-host of As It Happens — radio that’s too cheeky to be Canadian. She leaves the nightly call-out news program April 30. “I would never, never, ever walk away from a show that I still truly love,” Budd told the Toronto Globe & Mail. As with NPR decisions that led to Bob Edwards’ departure from Morning Edition, the CBC is putting more reportorial folks in hosting jobs, Guy Dixon wrote in the Globe & Mail. “In a general sense, it’s true that with the evolution of the show, we are looking to put more of a focus on hosts who are also journalists,” a CBC spokesman told Dixon.
  • Connection to community important to "New Muslim Cool," report details

    “New Muslim Cool: Engaging Stakeholders in the Filmmaking Process” is the latest Public Media 2.0 Field Report from the Center for Social Media at American University. The ongoing series of case studies, funded by the Ford Foundation’s Future of Public Media project, focuses on participatory and multiplatform work. “From development to production to distribution and outreach, all stages of this media project are characterized by a strong connection to the community portrayed in the film,” the Muslim hip-hop world, according to the report. Find out the challenges overcome and creative approaches used in the PBS film here (PDF).
  • APTS names Thompson interim president

    Lonna Thompson will serve as interim president and CEO of the Association of Public Television Stations in the wake of Larry Sidman’s departure (Current, March 14). The Board of Trustees approved the appointment effective today. Thompson also will continue in her current role of executive veep and general counsel for APTS.
  • Car rams through wall at WPBS in northern New York

    WPBS in Watertown, N.Y., got a jolt early last Saturday when a car crashed through one of its walls, reports Newzjunky.com, a northern New York news site. Fortunately, no one was inside the station. A 19-year-old was driving by the station at 4:27 a.m. when, he told police, he swerved to avoid a dog. The car veered into oncoming traffic, struck a curb, went airborne and landed in the side of the PBS affiliate’s building. Timothy Ames, director of technology and chief engineer at the station, told Current no word yet on costs to repair the damage. The driver was treated for a leg injury and charged with failure to keep right and driving at an unreasonable speed.
  • Take an afternoon music video break, courtesy of WETA

    It’s cherry blossom (and pledge) time in Washington, D.C., and WETA is offering an e-card on its website to share a bit of the springtime splendor. The images and music are part of the station’s The Washington Cherry Blossoms: Beauty on the Basin program — available for a $60 pledge, WETA reminds visitors.
  • It's a national nosh for POV's "Food, Inc."

    Planning to watch Food, Inc., on April 21 on PBS? Great opportunity for a potluck, POV points out. It’s encouraging viewers nationwide to meet, eat and watch the Oscar-nominated doc. Potluck hosts can register for prizes including books, gift cards and sustainable food items (dub those winners “potlucky”). Don’t know what dish to bring? Fear not, there are recipes too. The POV staff is throwing its own potluck next week in the office, sort of a test run for the big event. Simon Kilmurry, POV’s executive director, tells Current he’s bringing cloth napkins to ensure it’s a classy affair.
  • Jaime Escalante dies; inspirational educator had PBS show

    Famed educator Jaime Escalante, of PBS’s Futures with Jaime Escalante, died early yesterday morning, reports the Associated Press. He was 79. Escalante also appeared in two PBS specials, “Math…Who Needs It?!” and “Living and Working in Space: The Countdown Has Begun.” He received more than 50 awards for his PBS work, including a Peabody. Escalante was portrayed by Edward James Olmos in the 1988 hit film “Stand and Deliver.” In a statement, Olmos said: “The best way to honor the life and work of this great man is to keep it going and I, along with others whose lives he touched, intend to do that.”
  • Independence or merger for Pittsburgh's WDUQ?

    The editorial pages of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette have become a battleground over the future of WDUQ, the NPR News and jazz station recently offered for sale by Duquesne University. Supporters of WDUQ’s current management, who formed the nonprofit Pittsburgh Public Media to buy the station and preserve its service on 90.5 FM, are fending off a take-over bid by WQED-TV/FM, which has been public about its interest in picking up NPR News programming should PPM fail. “Unless 90.5 FM is taken over by an entity with a financially solid base, such as WQED, I’m worried that the station would not be able to afford the high standards of national and local news programming to which we’ve become accustomed,” William Byham, a WQED board member, editorialized on March 24.
  • Peabody Awards across the nation for public broadcasting

    Pubcasters are celebrating lots of George Foster Peabody Awards today. PBS received six — double the amount won by any other organization. Those winners are: “Jerome Robbins: Something to Dance About” on American Masters; “The Madoff Affair” on Frontline; two for Independent Lens, “The Order of Myths” and “Between the Folds”; “Endgame” from Masterpiece; and KCET’s “Inventing LA: The Chandlers and their Times.” KCET also scored for “Up in Smoke,” on medical marijuana. Other pubcasting winners: Sesame Street; “The Great Textbook War,” from West Virginia Public Broadcasting; “Hard Times” from Oregon Public Radio; Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson’s coverage of Afghanistan for National Public Radio; WAMU-FM’s The Diane Rehm Show; and NPR.org
  • Marketplace host turned blogger bids farewell

    Scott Jagow, author of Marketplace‘s Scratch Pad blog since last February, will write his final post today. “The grant paying for my position is running out, and it won’t be renewed. Such are the times,” he explained to readers yesterday. The blog, funded through a CPB initiative for web-based economics coverage, will end. Matt Berger, the new web producer for Marketplace.org, plans to add more contributors, new multimedia features, and updates to the homepage and site design. Jagow, who gave up his job hosting Marketplace Morning Report to create the blog, is off “to new and exciting adventures.”