Nice Above Fold - Page 705
Development Director, Youth Radio, Oakland, CA
Youth Radio/Media International is seeking an experienced Development Director who can grow and lead a development department, diversifying revenue sources while capitalizing on Youth Radio’s long history in public media. The Development Director will work closely with the Board, Executive Director, senior staff, and finance department, and supervise the work of development associates, grant writers and administrative interns in day-to-day operations. The Development Director will actively pursue established fundraising models/traditional sources of revenue within public broadcasting, including but not limited to: car donations, membership, events, sponsorship and underwriting. In addition, this position will supervise the development of traditional and nontraditional nonprofit revenue sources, including local and national foundations, government agencies and individual donors.Director of Radio Engagement, National Center for Media Engagement, Madison, WI
The new Director of Radio Engagement will help shape the thinking and engagement efforts of the public radio community nationwide. The National Center for Media Engagement has an enviable track record in strengthening public media’s local service through community engagement. NCME is wholly funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and is attached to the University of Wisconsin-Extension on the UW-Madison campus. Requirements include a bachelor’s degree and 7+ years with significant experience in and knowledge of public radio. Full details and requirements at: http://mediaengage.org/connect/employment. Betsy Nelson, 821 University Ave., Madison, WI 53706. betsy.nelsonwpt.org. EOE/AA.Executive Director, WCQS, Asheville, NC
Western North Carolina Public Radio, Inc. is excited to announce its search for the position of Executive Director. WNCPR, Inc. owns and operates WCQS (www.wcqs.org), serving Asheville and 11 neighboring counties in Western North Carolina. Located in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains, WCQS serves a culturally rich and diverse population. WCQS is a community licensee founded in 1984 with a coverage area population of 550,000 and average weekly cume of 66,000. With 10 full-time staff, the station operates with an annual budget in excess of $1 million. We invite candidates who have the energy, integrity, talent, and experience to lead WCQS in achieving our Vision.
Obama proposes $460 million for CPB in FY13, up $15 million over FY12, but no funding for PTFP
President Barack Obama’s budget for next year recommends $496 million for CPB, including a $460 million two-year advance appropriation for FY13, according to APTS. That’s an increase of $40 million from this year and $15 million from FY12. Also included is $36 million for pubTV and radio digital conversion, content and services. “The proposed increase in the advance appropriation reflects a recognition of the enormous return on investment public broadcasting generates regarding education, job training and disease prevention,” said APTS President Larry Sidman. But persuasive work remains, Sidman noted: The budget omits funding for the Public Telecommunications Facilities Program, which helps pay for public stations’ equipment upgrades, and the Agriculture Department’s Rural Utility Service Digital Transition Grant Program.Prairie Home Companion goes live in 500 theaters on Thursday
This week, a special Thursday edition of A Prairie Home Companion will be “cinecast” live in HD to some 500 theaters across North America. The two-hour show starts at 8 p.m., with an encore Feb. 9. It’s the first time the eclectic program has tried this.Former reporter appearing on NewsHour now editor of Washington Times
A former Time correspondent whose reports ran on the PBS NewsHour is the new editor of the Washington Times, the paper announced today. The show carried Sam Dealey’s segments from Africa. The paper’s top management staff was recently terminated from the Times, which is owned by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church.
PETA files FCC complaint over Sesame link to American Egg Board
In a story headlined, “PETA Smacks Big Bird in D.C.,” Broadcasting & Cable writes that People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has filed a complaint with the FCC against pubTV stations that air Sesame Street. Two problems, PETA says: The show is presenting a spot showing a sanitary poultry processing plant with children eating eggs and talking about their nutritive value. PETA has long contended that chickens raised for slaughter or egg production live in filthy, inhumane conditions. Also, PETA says the American Egg Board’s work is embedded in Sesame Street segments; the board is the industry promotional group created by Congress for egg producers.KAET moves to new digital media center at Arizona State
PBS President Paula Kerger was on hand Saturday for the grand opening of KAET/Channel 8’s new digital media center at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University, reports the State Press student paper. Arizona PBS General Manager Kelly McCullough said the move has been planned for two years. Under three hours after staffers signed off at the former station, they were on the air from the new facility. “The transition was surprisingly smooth,” McCullough said. “There was so much that really could have gone wrong. We have had some glitches and I’m sure we’ll have a few more but the important fact is, we’re on the air on three channels in high quality in nearly all of Arizona.”Light weekend reading from "Grow the Audience"
As a follow-up to its recent report on public radio audience growth strategies, Station Resource Group asked 14 leading pubcasting and public media experts to react to its recommendations on new media. Which of the many activities proposed to advance pubradio in the “networked environment” should be top priority? In Proposals for Investments in New Media (PDF), an analysis and report on what the 14 respondents told SRG, two initiatives appear to have “relatively broad support”: developing a flexible local/national Internet structure for distributing all pubradio content, and exploring a coordinated online fundraising system. If you haven’t already read the final set (PDF) of recommendations from the CPB-backed Grow the Audience project, the section on new media–which is the focus of this particular discussion–begins on page 43.CPB issues affirmative action report
The CPB Board earlier this week approved its FY08-09 affirmative action report and FY10 plan (PDF). According to the document, during FY09, total employees increased from 100 to 114; 12 staffers left during that year. Of the 26 employees hired, 13 are women and 10 are minorities. In FY 2009 CPB also hired five student interns: one male and four females, and three of the five were minorities. That brings the total staff breakdown for 2009 to non-minority, 61 percent; minorities, 39 percent; males, 45 percent; and females, 55 percent. For 2010, CPB says it will work to maintain or increase minority and female representation within executive and senior officials and managers, as well as first and mid-level officials and managers.President Obama congratulates Sesame Street on its 40 years
President Barack Obama has released a minute-long video praising Sesame Street on its 40th anniversary year — or, as he says, “this video is brought to you by the number 40.” He congratulates the show “as a parent, and as the president,” and recalls watching it with his younger sister. His two girls as well “learned a great deal” from the show. “There are many adults who can stand to learn again the lessons Sesame Street offers: Compassion, kindness and respect for our differences,” the president noted.Goldsmith Prize finalists include Frontline producer
Frontline’s Tom Jennings is part of a team of journalists that are finalists for the prestigious Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, the Harvard Kennedy School announced today. The investigation, titled “Law and Disorder,” revealed details of police shootings of at least 10 persons in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. In addition to Jennings, reporters included Gordon Russell, Laura Maggi and Brendan McCarthy of the New Orleans Times-Picayune, A.C. Thompson of public interest journalism site ProPublica, along with support from the Nation Institute, a progressive think tank supporting freedom of the press. The winner of six project finalists will be announced at a March 23 ceremony at Harvard.Public broadcasting obituaries
Greg Shanley, 49, longtime news director, producer and show host for Iowa Public Radio, died Tuesday night at University of Iowa Hospitals in Iowa City, according to the Des Moines Register. He was hired in 1987 as a producer/reporter, and served as local host of Morning Edition before moving into the director post. Other obituaries in Current: Carlos Sena of KSUT in Colorado; Robben Fleming, former CPB Board president; and Lillie Herndon, who served on the boards of PBS and CPB.NewHour's annotated version of Obama speech called "remarkable"
PBS NewsHour’s “Annotated State of the Union” is being praised by the Poynter Institute’s Al Tompkins as a “remarkable analysis.” He’s the Group Leader for Broadcasting and Online at the institute, which is a school for journalists and media teachers. The feature breaks the speech into clips with links to resources for people who want to learn more. “It’s pretty brilliant,” Tompkins writes. Anne Bell, spokesperson for the show, said analysis by Mark Shields and David Brooks on YouTube also received more than 22,000 views.Haiti telethon, carried by PBS, has raised $66 million so far
Relief organizations have raised a total of more than $525 million for victims of the recent earthquake in Haiti, according to the Chronicle of Philanthropy. As of Wednesday, the figures from just a few: A worldwide telethon last Friday, “Help for Haiti Now,” raised $66 million; it was carried by a multitude of channels including PBS affiliates. The American Red Cross received about $185 million, some $29 million of that via text messages. And Convio, which provides software to charities, processed more than $195 million online.
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