Nice Above Fold - Page 759

  • Kangas leaving Nightly Business Report

    After a 30-year run, Nightly Business Report co-anchor Paul Kangas is stepping down. WPBT, the PBS station in Miami that produces “Nightly Business Report,” plans to announce his departure today, according to The New York Times. His co-anchor, Susie Gharib, will continue on the program. Producers have begun a search for a replacement. “I’m not retiring,” Kangas said in a statement. “Business news is what I know and it’s what I am. So I plan to stay involved through speaking engagements, guest commentaries, television appearances and consultation. NBR has a fine nucleus of young talent that works hard to secure the tough interviews and tell the important stories.
  • CBC repackages "Outfront" for PRX offer

    Public Radio Exchange and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation are offering hour-long versions of Outfront, an award-winning CBC Radio series of personal essays that previously had been distributed as extended modules. Producers Neil Sandell and Marieke Meyer have created a package of six programs, combining the best works into thematic shows hosted by the CBC’s Natasha Fatah. There may be more CBC programming to come from PRX. In a news release, PRX describes the offer as a “content development project.”
  • Eight projects backed in final round of Makers Quest

    Makers Quest 2.0 has unveiled the eight audio-centric new media projects that received backing to complete production by August. The Association of Independents in Radio, which is managing the CPB-backed initiative, paired each of the producers with public radio stations or networks that will “incubate” the projects for broadcast and other distribution. The initiative began last fall with a nomination round in which 30 independent producers were invited to submit proposals.
  • Former PBS chair testifies at Cap Hill media hearing

    Alberto Ibarguen, former PBS chairman and now president of the Knight Foundation, testified on Capitol Hill today. The hearing, on the future of journalism, was before the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet. Ibarguen challenged lawmakers to consider that broadcast and print media could indeed join forces. “I think it is at least worth a fresh look under current circumstances to see if a resulting combination, perhaps combined with stronger use of new and social media, can help to survive traditional news operations that still have such great expertise in reporting,” his written testimony said. Read the full, expanded transcript of his remarks here.
  • "We Shall Remain" sparks charity drive

    The American Experience series “We Shall Remain” on Native American history has inspired a drive in Massachusetts to help residents of the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, according to The Concord Journal. The Many Nations Trading Post in Concord, Mass., is collecting toys and clothing, and taking cash donations to ship the goods. “The reservations get overlooked and are almost invisible to people,” said Carole Ann Baer, heading up the effort. “It’s a spirit, a strong nation that has been broken, but they are still fighting for survival. That’s why the title of the PBS series is so poignant, it’s showing that the spirit of the people shall remain despite the poverty and hardship.”
  • Juilliard student creates new music for WNET, WLIW

    PubTV stations Channel 13 and WLIW21 in New York are debuting new identification spots featuring music created by a Juilliard student. Have a listen here to the new tunes performed by the Juilliard orchestra.
  • Super Why! research shows increase in literacy skills

    Two new studies examining the PBS Kids series Super WHY! provide proof of the show’s effectiveness on literacy skills, according to a joint statement from PBS and CPB. The studies, funded by CPB through a Department of Education Ready to Learn grant, were conducted by the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and Florida State University’s Center for Reading Research. Deborah L. Linebarger, director of the Annenberg Children’s Media Lab, commented in the statement that “an impressive indicator of the power of Super WHY! is that meaningful changes in preschoolers’ early literacy skills were found with exposure to as few as two or three episodes.”
  • FCC rules forthcoming on replacement digital translators

    The FCC may soon announce rules for new replacement digital translator service, which will let stations use translators to fill DTV signal coverage gaps in their current digital coverage areas and replicate their former analog reach, according to Broadcasting & Cable. The construction deadline is expected to be extended from the currently proposed six months to three years.
  • Salt Lake's KCPW lays off two; CEO cleaning bathrooms

    KCPW, the pubradio station in Salt Lake City, has laid off two employees and cut salaries following lax fund-raising drives. CEO and President Ed Sweeney told the Salt Lake Crawler blog that underwriting is fine but individual donations are down. One of the station’s two reporters was let go. Sweeney told Current that he now cleans the station himself–including the bathrooms–saving $400 a month.
  • PRI trims staff by three, reassigns others

    Public Radio International laid off three employees, dropped two vacant positions and reassigned about 10 of its 55-member staff in a restructuring that took effect Monday. The restructuring aims to raise resources needed to strengthen programming and marketing within the tightened budget of the Minneapolis-based program distributor/producer, says Julia Yager, v.p. of brand management and marketing strategy. PRI has “aggressively” watched costs and expects only a “very slight” operating loss this fiscal year, she says. The three lost positions were spread among the marketing , communications and programming units. One of PRI’s major initiatives, The Takeaway morning news program coproduced with WNYC, has just passed its first year on the air and is now heard on 36 main-channel pubradio stations (plus five HD Radio multicast channels), she said.
  • ATC returns to China's Sichuan Province

    NPR’s Melissa Block and Andrea Hsu, key members of the All Things Considered team that delivered award-winning coverage when an earthquake devastated China’s Sichuan province last May, have returned to the region to report on its recovery. They’re posting updates on the Chengdu Diary blog that generated so much interest last year, and are hosting a live chat on NPR.org right now. Their follow-up reports, which began airing on Monday, are here.
  • First lady talks health on Sesame Street

    First lady Michelle Obama paid a visit to Sesame Street on Tuesday to tape a public service announcement as part of Sesame Workshop’s Healthy Habits For Life initiative. Mrs. Obama and Elmo talked about eating right, exercising regularly and being a healthy and positive role model for children. (Photo: Richard Termine)
  • Pennsylvania pubcasting supporters rally at capitol

    Public broadcasting supporters and viewers–including teachers, station employees and even toddlers–protested at the Pennsylvania state capitol in Harrisburg Tuesday in an attempt to persuade the legislature to restore funding for the state’s eight pubTV stations. Gov. Ed Rendell’s proposed budget would zero-out $8 million in grants to stations including WQED in Pittsburgh. “Dozens of moms with kids in strollers, costumed characters, music groups, all the GMs from our stations, community leaders and even legislators joined us to rally to get the funding restored,” Rosemary Martinelli, WQED spokeswoman told Current. “We need to communicate that it is not just a cut but a total elimination.”
  • More viewers upset with Comcast over loss of stations

    Add West Virginia PBS to the growing list of stations receiving calls from viewers upset that they suddenly can’t receive their favorite channel via their current Comcast cable subscription. This time it’s customers in the Northern and Eastern Panhandles of West Virginia, and Morgantown. A Comcast spokesman explained that viewers now need a digital converter box to receive the station under a new agreement between Comcast and West Virginia Public Broadcasting. But in a statement, station Executive Director Dennis Adkins said: “We were not aware that Comcast customers would be required to have special equipment or of the significant number of Comcast subscribers who would not have the appropriate equipment to take advantage of this expanded service.”
  • Nature show's eagles still popular in Iowa

    An Internet site featuring a Web camera installed in Decorah, Iowa, last summer for the Nature episode “American Eagle” continues to draw visitors from some 70 countries, according to the Decorah Public Opinion newspaper. Bob Anderson, director of the local nonprofit Raptor Resource Project, says its DSL service has been scrambling to keep up with the high viewing demand for the site. Milwaukee Public TV also featured an eagle cam on one of its multicast channels in 2002.