Nice Above Fold - Page 801

  • Sesame Street book getting press

    Michael Davis’ new book, “Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street,” is getting attention in the press. The New York Times published a review on Dec. 26 headlined, “Brought to you by the letter S,” by James Panero, managing editor of The New Criterion. He laments what he sees as Davis’ focus on trivia: “Do we really need to know that (Joan Ganz) Cooney served boeuf bourguignon, ‘a traditional French country recipe . . . on Page 315 of the first volume of “Mastering the Art of French Cooking,” ‘ to Lloyd Morrisett at their 1966 dinner?” He calls the book, the 40-year-old program’s first complete overview, “a tireless if not altogether artful history of this unique place.”
  • PubTV station nears all-Catholic channel deal

    RGV Educational Broadcasting Inc., owner of KMBH-TV in Harlingen, Texas, hopes to have a deal inked by Jan. 19 with recording company Gospa Records to provide programming for KMBH DT 38.2, its upcoming digital all-Catholic channel. The Brownsville Herald reports that Gospa will form a nonprofit arm to work with the station, with Gospa paying for time on the air. KMBH will earn $120,000 the first year and $240,000 for each of the remaining years of the five-year deal. In addition, KMBH will receive 50 percent of the money generated by commercials on the station. No CPB or PBS funds will be used in the deal.
  • Its structure cripples pubmedia, new report contends

    A report on pubcasting is one of a series of new research papers from the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. The project, titled, “Media Re:public: News and Information as the Digital Media Come of Age,” explores the potential and challenges of the emerging networked digital media environment, according to its website. One of the 11 papers, on public broadcasting and public affairs, is authored by Pat Aufderheide, director of the Center for Social Media at American University; Jessica Clark, director of the Future of Public Media project, also at American University; and Jake Shapiro, founder of Public Radio Exchange.
  • At North Carolina station, layoffs start at the top

    The board of WHQR in Wilmington, N.C., has laid off three of its top managers, including General Manager John Milligan, the Wilmington Star-News reported yesterday. The layoffs, intended to maintain the station’s “long-term financial viability,” the news release said, also include the news and development directors. In addition, the station eliminated its p.d. position, which is vacant. The station’s website lists about a dozen staff members and 10 on-air personalities.
  • Pipeline 2009

    This annual list, now incorporating its Dec. 22 addendum, includes about 180 noninstructional projects one hour or longer in various stages of planning, fundraising and production that will debut nationally in January 2009 and beyond. ¶ Children’s programs don’t appear in this list. We’ll report on them in Current next year. ¶ Responding to Current’s annual Pipeline survey, producers and their distributors supplied most information for this list. Thanks to those who responded to the survey.   Winter/spring09 All About Prints Producing organization: Stereopticon Pictures. Distributor: APT. Episodes: 1 x 60 (HD). Status: postproduction. Major funder: Print Research Foundation. Executive producer: Christopher Noey.
  • Revenue slides for WWOZ, Jazz Fest

    After far-flung listeners and pubradio stations pitched in to aid WWOZ’s recovery from Hurricane Katrina in 2005, donations to the New Orleans community station have plummeted, according to New Orleans CityBusiness. The station has been relying promotions of Brass Passes–premium memberships that begin at $375 and provide special access to the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage festival–to stay afloat. David Freedman, WWOZ g.m., tells the business journal that Jazz Fest itself is at risk because “we are having trouble finding the underwriting to support it.”
  • Is pubradio willing to spend what it will take to grow the audience?

    Surveying the wreckage of canceled public radio shows, research and marketing consultant John Sutton outlines the lessons learned from NPR’s Day to Day and APM’s Weekend America, two shows that received millions in CPB aid toward their goals to attract new audiences and funding.
  • ITVS selects five projects for funding

    The Independent Television Service has announced contracts with five projects from its International Call 2008. The films selected to receive production funding were chosen from 385 submissions in 74 countries. The winners will be broadcast on PBS, including prime-time slots on Independent Lens and the new PBS World series Global Voices. The programs also will be distributed on commercial outlets including the Sundance Channel, the National Geographic Channel and HBO, and on online video sites such as Caachi, Jaman and SnagFilms. Winners originated in Serbia, Indonesia, Armenia, China and Kurdistan. Two more projects will be selected soon.
  • Proposed 50 percent NY fund cut stuns pubcasters

    New York’s public broadcasters were shocked by Gov. David Paterson’s proposed 50 percent cut in state funding, a move they say may force staff and programming reductions, according to the Times-Union in Albany. The budget, presented last week, reduces the state’s subsidy for public broadcasting to $9.4 million divided among nine pubTV stations and 17 pubradio stations. Peter Repas, executive director of the Association of Public Broadcasting Stations of New York, says his group will lobby hard against the cuts. “If implemented, this cut will change the face of public broadcasting in New York,” he says.
  • 'Electric Company' returns, Naomi still missing

    A new Electric Company, based on that 1970s PBS hit, premieres Jan. 19.
  • WGBH lays off 12

    Boston’s WGBH added to the host of recent announcements of station layoffs today with the news that it will lay off 12 employees. The station has also frozen salaries for management and filling of vacant positions and reduced capital purchases. Membership revenue has held steady for the broadcaster, but corporate sponsorship has declined, said a spokeswoman. The Associated Employees of the Educational Foundation, WGBH’s in-house union, agreed to a restructuring of the network’s design department and to accept smaller wage increases next fiscal year. More in the Boston Herald.
  • APM shutters Weekend America

    American Public Media announced today that it will cease production of Weekend America, its two-hour weekly digest, as of Jan. 31. The cancellation will affect 13 full- and part-time jobs related to the show, but a spokeswoman for APM could not confirm how many of those employees would be laid off. The show airs on 134 stations. APM and its sister regional network, Minnesota Public Radio, face a deficit of upwards of $2 million as income from all sources declines. A blogger for MinnPost.com shares the press release.
  • Retired CBS exec to helm KPCW in Park City

    The new manager of Utah’s KPCW-FM is retired television executive Jonathan Klein, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. Klein managed Baltimore CBS affiliate WJZ-TV and later became a CBS president in charge of 14 stations. Klein’s radio experience includes managing KDKA in Pittsburgh and serving on the board of Baltimore’s WJHU-FM, the NPR station sold by Johns Hopkins University in 2001. He succeeds Blair Feulner, a KPCW founder and longtime manager who announced his departure to listeners in July. KPCW also is accepting applications for program director and development director.
  • New book details history of "Sesame Street"

    Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street by former TV Guide editor Michael Davis hits bookstores Dec. 26. The book “also covers early public television (then as ever an unwieldy, perplexing contraption). And it invokes the 1960s idealism that ignited Sesame Street and remains a fundamental part,” writes Frazier Moore of the Associated Press.
  • NPR, pubTV holding steady for news viewers

    NPR is maintaining a generally steady listenership among Americans for their daily news, Gallup polling shows. Some 18 percent of Americans listen to the pubradio network daily, which is the same figure as in 1995 — but down slightly from 19 percent in December 2006. PubTV daily news viewership remains at 28 percent, same as in December 2006. Results are based on telephone interviews with 1,009 Americans ages 18 and older; polling was conducted Dec 4-7.