Nice Above Fold - Page 1004

  • At July 10’s House hearing, NPR President Kevin Klose offered his personal and professional apology to the Traditional Values Coalition for a news segment that linked the Christian organization to the anthrax investigation, Variety reports (see Current‘s earlier report on the flap).
  • Read a suite of dispatches from a conference on public radio talk shows, held in April.
  • A New York Times critic lauds tonight’s report from Iraq by Gwynne Roberts as “the timeliest possible beginning to Wide Angle,” a new PBS foreign affairs series. [The program’s website.]
  • The L.A. Times profiles public radio’s Studio 360, which host Kurt Andersen says goes beyond high culture to show us the art “on TV and in our bathrooms.” [Current profiled the show last summer.]
  • Staci Kramer of the Online Journalism Review supports NPR’s new linking policy—with a few reservations. [Read the Current story about the debate.]
  • LA Times critic Howard Rosenberg describes PBS’s American Family as the best of television’s new Latino family dramas: “It’s rich and atmospheric, witty and a major tug on your heartstrings, all with no trace of phoniness. Your loss if you’re missing it.”
  • The conflict between NPR and the Traditional Values Coalition is on the agenda of the House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing today at 10 on Capitol Hill. [Current report on the affair.] It’s unlikely the committee will avoid the topic with both Andrea Lafferty of the conservative group and NPR President Kevin Klose as witnesses. Also up: the heads of CPB, PBS, APTS, WNYC and cable exec Michael Willner of Insight Communications, who has in the past objected to extensive DTV carriage demands by broadcasters.
  • Ken Burns brags the sound will be so good on the forthcoming digitally remastered version of The Civil War that “when you see Pickett’s Charge, it will rearrange your molecules,” he told Gail Shister of the Philadelphia Inquirer. His next bio topics: Horatio Nelson Jackson, who won a bet in 1903 by driving coast to coast in less than 90 days (voice by Tom Hanks) and boxing champ Jack Johnson (voice by Samuel Jackson).
  • The secretary of Pacifica‘s board has asked the network to renegotiate its freshly-inked contract with the show Democracy Now!. Carol Spooner alleges that the contract, which establishes Democracy Now! as a self-owned production company independent from Pacifica, was signed prematurely and could hurt the network financially.
  • Nearly half of PBS’s member station broadcast Louis Rukeyser’s new CNBC series, but public TV officials reject suggestions that these stations are rebelling against changes to his long-running PBS show, Wall Street Week. Rukeyser is still angry about his abrupt departure from the PBS series.
  • Teens take control on 2K Nation, a new show on the Washington, D.C. Pacifica affiliate WPFW.
  • While rhetoric flows, WFUV and opponents seek alternative tower site

    Fordham University’s WFUV-FM and its opponents across the street at the New York Botanical Garden have been quietly pursuing an alternative site for the station’s tower, even while their defenders sparred publicly in FCC forums June 27. After eight years of legal struggles with the botanical garden, WFUV hangs its antenna from a tower that, despite being cut short by halted construction, offends the garden’s management. Both sides are encouraged by progress of negotiations for the alternative site. Garden spokesman Karl Lauby says only that the site is “up north” and WFUV General Manager Ralph Jennings won’t discuss its location at all.
  • A New York Times critic says the PBS four-parter series Great Projects, starting tonight, will impress viewers with the foresight of big-thinking civil engineers and the politicians that back them but nevertheless fails to persuade that Michael Dukakis was a swashbuckling hero.
  • Katie Davis, formerly of NPR, appears today in a Washington Post column, talking about the Washington, D.C. park where she spends a lot of time. Settling with NPR yielded “her retirement fund,” she says.
  • NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin summarizes the flap over the network’s linking policies in his latest “Media Matters” column.