Nice Above Fold - Page 883

  • Greg Guma, co-founder of the Vermont Guardian, will become executive director of the Pacifica Foundation, left-of-center operator of five pubradio stations [Pacifica website], the Guardian reported today. Predecessor Dan Coughlin held the position three years before resigning in June 2005. Guma has edited two other progressive publications, owned bookstores, coordinated the Peace and Justice Center in Burlington and headed a legal services group for immigrants in New Mexico. Meanwhile, the board of Pacifica’s KPFA-FM in Berkeley has reportedly recommended firing the station manager there, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
  • A co-host of War News Radio on Swarthmore College’s public radio station discussed the show on public radio’s The World last week. (Link launches Windows Media Player file.)
  • Chris Douridas, a host on KCRW-FM in Santa Monica, was arrested last week on suspicion of drugging and trying to kidnap a teenaged girl, reports the Los Angeles Times. “We believe in Chris as a person, and we think he has strong character,” said a KCRW exec. (Press release from the Santa Monica Police Department.)
  • Will Oprah come to Masterpiece Theatre‘s rescue? A Reuters story suggests that PBS will ask Harpo, Oprah Winfrey’s production company, to sponsor MT miniseries, quoting outgoing PBS President Pat Mitchell. “Oprah is incredibly philanthropic with her money and supports so many good causes,” Mitchell told reporters at last weekend’s Television Critics Association press tour in Pasadena. “This would be one.” WGBH sources aren’t aware of any plans to approach Winfrey with sponsorship proposals, however. MT has been looking for a major sponsor since ExxonMobil turned off the cash pumps after the 2004 season. More from the press tour: PBS needs more money.
  • A former freelancer for NPR has filed a lawsuit against the Museum of Modern Art alleging that the museum got him fired from his reporting job. David D’Arcy claims that MoMA officials lied to his editors at NPR and demanded a false correction. An NPR spokeswoman denied the charges in the suit, according to a UPI clip. NPR reporter sues MoMA over firing
  • Gerry Weston is stepping down as president of the Public Radio Partnership in Louisville under pressure from the nonprofit’s board, reports the Louisville Courier-Journal.
  • NPR has named Ted Koppel a senior news analyst and hired ABC’s Michel Martin (bio) to host a daily two-hour public affairs show aimed at African-American listeners. Koppel will provide analysis on newsmags and other shows about 50 times a year and be on hand for breaking news and special events coverage. Martin will contribute to programs and serve as a substitute host until her own show debuts later this year.
  • Peruse WFMU’s extensive collection of velvet paintings (featuring the likenesses of Zell Miller, Osama Bin Laden and JonBenet Ramsey, among others) in all their splendor. (Oh, and news to us: WFMU has a home on Flickr.)
  • A major AM news station’s switch to FM in the nation’s capital is “a direct attack” on the city’s public radio stations, writes a Billboard Radio Monitor analyst.
  • NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin says some of his network’s breaking coverage of the West Virginia mine disaster showed “a lack of sensitivity for the miners and their families.”
  • News about angry pubradio listeners’ lawsuit against Detroit’s WDET made the New York Times today. Seven station members on Dec. 19 sued the station for fraud, claiming the music station tricked them into pledging in October even as managment planned to switch its daytime schedule to national news programming. “It’s a better business decision and it’s a better service to this urban market,” Michael Coleman, general manager of WDET, told the Times. “I think public radio needs to be about more than music programming.” The disgruntled listeners started a website, SaveDetroitRadio.com, and are trying to negotiate a compromise with WDET or its owner, Wayne State University, according to the Times.
  • “Fairness and balance, Mr. Brancaccio, keep it in mind.” CPB Ombudsman Ken Bode chastises Now‘s host for lobbing “softball questions” at Craig McDonald of Texans for Public Justice, a chief critic of Rep. Tom Delay, during a Sept. 30 interview. The program, which included a report critical of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, prompted a complaint from South Carolina Republican Congressman Bob Inglis. In his Dec. 30 column examining the same edition of Now, PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler came to different conclusions.
  • Professionals from the fields of public radio and the performing arts will meet in New York this month for the Music & Media forum. The two-day event, staged by representatives from public radio’s major networks, will focus on finding new ways to collaborate and increase audiences for jazz, classical and alternative music on the air and in performance.
  • “[W]ho wouldn’t love a big, friendly, stoned (and “energetic”) tree sloth and all his singing, dancing buddies?,” asks Blogging Baby, in a review of the new PBS Kids show, It’s a Big, Big World. A critic for the LA Times notes that series creator Mitchell Kriegman followed the Mister Rogers paradigm in casting his lead character Snook as a giant tree sloth who talks and moves slowly. But the Boston Globe‘s reviewer wrote that Snook is too laid back to stand out in the crowded field of beloved kids TV characters.
  • Slate‘s Andy Bowers (formerly of NPR) picks podcasts of the year, including a couple from the world of public radio.