Nice Above Fold - Page 745

  • WHTJ staffers now working from home

    WHTJ in Richmond, Va., has shrunk from five employees to just two–both of whom work from home, reports The Hook, a weekly newpaper in Charlottesville. The station recently closed its office across from City Hall, and g.m. D.J. Crotteau left June 5, according to the paper. WHTJ is part of the Community Idea Stations, which are owned by the Commonwealth Public Broadcasting Corporation. The station offers one local program, but “we don’t really need a studio for that,” station spokeswoman Lynn McCarthy-Jones told the paper. “We don’t need to do that in-house.”
  • Iowa Public Radio cuts nine spots

    Nine positions, or 14 percent of the workforce, are gone at Iowa Public Radio. A statement from CEO Mary Grace Herrington said the move completes a reorganization that began with the merger of three pubradio groups into a state network (Current, January 2005 and September 2008). Several employees will take early retirement, and others are being offered severance packages. Four of the nine are vacant slots. The reorganization also includes shifting staff into other areas.
  • Conference takes first steps toward official nonprof investigative network

    The Watchdogs at Pocantico conference, “Building an Investigative News Network,” has wrapped up in Tarrytown, N.Y., and attendees from nearly 30 media outlets are heading home. But before they departed, they signed onto the Pocantico Declaration. It recommends preparations begin immediately to form the Investigative News Network. The network will “aid and abet, in every conceivable way … the work and public reach of its member news organizations.” The steering committee will begin fund-raising work, and create an Investigative News Network website. “What is clear in this Pocantico Declaration,” the treatise concludes, “is that we have hereby established, for the first time ever, an Investigative News Network of nonprofit news publishers throughout the United States of America.”
  • Wayne Dyer = New Age, letter writer says

    Time for the PBS ombudsman’s Mailbag column. Michael Getler received a letter from a viewer upset about the PBS Board’s sectarian programming decision. The writer’s request: “Re the no religious broadcasting … please then remove Wayne Dyer from your begathon. He is as New Age as they come.”
  • House committee may investigate Arbitron's Portable People Meters

    The Miami-Dade (Fla.) County Board of Supervisors is the latest entity to take on Arbitron’s Portable People Meters. On Tuesday the board adopted a resolution to “ensure that the ratings methodology used by the Portable People Meter ratings system designed to measure radio station listenership does not under-represent minority radio listeners.” That’s the alleged problem that is drawing so much attention to the ratings devices. Broadcasting & Cable also reports that the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee plans to investigate the devices. In its defense, Arbitron contends it has been refining and improving the meters with suggestions from members of Congress, the FCC, the industry and other interested parties.
  • Public Radio Tech Survey kicks off July 27

    The second Public Radio Tech Survey, a web-based analysis of listeners, runs for three weeks starting July 27. It will explore new media and technology use among pubradio listeners nationwide, as well as by market. Last year more than 70 stations took part, generating some 30,000 interviews. The project is coordinated by Jacobs Media, which calls itself “the largest radio consulting firm in the United States specializing in rock formats.” Partnering in the survey are NPR, the Integrated Media Association and Public Radio Program Directors.
  • Lightbulbs going off all over Aspen as pubcasters mingle at Ideas Festival

    Public broadcasters are in the impressive mix of forward-thinkers this week at the Aspen Institute’s fifth annual Ideas Festival. Here it is, only Day 1, and Frontline e.p. David Fanning had this great quote: “Public broadcasting has always been at war with itself. I don’t need to tell you about Yanni at the Acropolis.” Fanning also detailed ideas for turning the public broadcasting system into a journalistic powerhouse. James Fallow of The Atlantic is keeping tabs on the activities, providing “slightly-longer-than-Twitter-scale real time summaries of what is going on.” Other system insiders brainstorming at the sessions include Kurt Anderson of PRI’s Studio 360, Paula S.
  • AlaskaOne terminates staff, shifts to live children's feed

    KUAC/AlaskaOne is shrinking its staff by a third due to a $450,000 budget deficit, according to The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Two employees are gone effective tomorrow, the start of KUAC’s fiscal year. Five long-vacant spots “are no longer on the books,” Gretchen Gordon, the station’s director of development and outreach, told Current. Also, two full-time positions are now part time. One of the new half-time jobs is the station’s marketing slot. “That may also impact our ability to cultivate and solicit donations, because our presence in the community is going to be effected,” Gordon said. All the changes reduce the staff to 19 employees from 28.
  • Burns requests Dust Bowl memories of Oklahomans for film

    PBS filmmaker Ken Burns is asking residents of Oklahoma to share their personal stories of the Dust Bowl for an upcoming documentary The Dust Bowl (w.t.). The Oklahoma Network is helping him gather the recollections. In a personal message to the people of the state, Burns said he thinks the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s, when severe drought affected crop production and created huge dust storms, “is an important event in all of American history.” He adds that his production company, Florentine Films, is in the early stages of research but that the state “will be a major part of the Dust Bowl story we want to tell.”
  • EDCAR's new name: PBS Digital Learning Library

    PBS announced yesterday that public TV’s new classroom service will be called the PBS Digital Learning Library. The project, discussed in earlier Current articles, was previously called EDCAR (Education Digital Content Asset Repository). The searchable trove of “learning assets,” including short videos and games, will be customizable by stations and searchable and tagged for compliance with state teaching standards. PBS made the announcement at the National Educational Computing Conference in Washington.
  • Familiar metaphorical smell snagged hosting job for Tyson

    In a Q&A with The Boston Globe, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson (right, NOVA photo) reveals how he came to host NOVA ScienceNOW. “After their inaugural season, in which I had been interviewed multiple times, they needed a new host,” he recalled. “They knew what I looked like, what I smelled like–metaphorically–and so my name sort of rose to the top.” And who’s the toughest interviewer of all his ongoing media appearances? Stephen Colbert of The Colbert Report, followed by Jon Stewart of The Daily Show, both on Comedy Central.
  • G4 comments to FCC on possible ethnicity, gender ID filing requirements

    Providing the FCC with a list of ethnicities and genders of individual pubcasters wouldn’t show a true picture of the role minorities and women play in station programming and services, according to a joint filing to the agency by APTS, CPT, NPR and PBS. The statement is in reaction to a proposed rulemaking that would change the FCC Form 323-E Ownership Report to report those details as well ethnicity ownership data. The four noted that while it wouldn’t necessarily be a problem to submit the information, no one individual holds equity interest in a station. And because ownership varies widely for pubstations, “it would be unhelpful, and potentially misleading,” to lump together data for noncoms and commercial stations if the FCC wants a “comprehensive picture of broadcast ownership.”
  • CPB launches emergency readiness cooperative project

    A collaboration between several pubcasting and communications groups is at the core of CPB’s new Station Action for Emergency Readiness (SAFER) initiative. Helping in development are the National Federation of Community Broadcasters; NPR; PBS stations KQED, Mississippi Public Broadcasting and Atlanta Public Broadcasting; and the Integrated Media Association. There’ll be online tools such as a customizable station readiness manual, as well as webinars and workshops in which experts help stations implement a response program for their community. Ginny Z. Berson, an NFCB veep, told Current the website should launch late this year, with webinars starting up in 2010. Budget for the project, three years in the planning, is $270,000.
  • Pennsylvania stations join forces for pubcasting Advocacy Day

    Pennsylvania pubcasters are coming together for a state Public TV Advocacy Day tomorrow in an attempt to save state funding. They’re asking viewers and listeners to write letters to state representatives, senators and Gov. Ed Rendell to restore the governor’s proposed pubcasting budget cuts. His budget would zero out all funding — $7.9 million — for station operations, cut technical support from $4.34 million to $2 million, and abolish the Pennsylvania Public Television Network as an independent commission of state government. Negotiations over the budget could continue for six to eight more weeks, according to published reports. The Advocacy Day Web site also features photos of a May rally by schoolchildren supporting WQLN in Erie, Pa.
  • NYSE bells ring in "Super Why!" toys

    The folks behind PBS Kids’ Super Why! recently got to ring the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange to celebrate the retail launch of the popular program’s toy line. Pictured from left are Super Why! character Whyatt Beanstalk; show creators Samantha Freeman and Angela Santomero of Out of the Blue; Lesli Rotenberg, PBS children’s media guru; and Larry Leibowitz, a veep at the NYSE Euronext Group, the corporation that runs the stock exchange. Super Why! toys are now available at Toys “R” Us.