Nice Above Fold - Page 985

  • Paste magazine covers triple-A and Americana music, with some emphasis given to noncommercial triple-A stations. Their site now features a profile of eclectic KEXP in Seattle.
  • The FCC has overturned a $7,000 fine levied against Portland’s KBOO for airing the sexually explicit song “Your Revolution” by rap artist Sarah Jones (FCC’s ruling in PDF).
  • The city council in Whitesburg, Ky., also declined to endorse an state funding application from the Appalshop community media center–but not because of any alleged anti-Americanism. (See below.)
  • Marketplace host David Brancaccio discusses his show’s raison d’etre with the Boston Globe. (Via Romenesko.)
  • PBS and MTV air programs tonight on the threat of war with Iraq, Frontline‘s “The War Behind Closed Doors” and an MTV news special that serves as a “more elementary but also intelligent primer” for its young viewers. The New York Times reviewed both.
  • Fast Company named Susan Clampitt, g.m. of WAMU in Washington, D.C., one of its “Fast 50.”
  • NPR’s Steve Inskeep is a finalist for the 2003 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, awarded by the Shorenstein Center. (Via Romenesko.)
  • Public radio stations in New Hampshire and Vermont expect the FCC will soon decide on their application for a jointly owned classical music station.
  • Ellen Kushner, host of public radio’s Sound and Spirit, has helped launch the Interstitial Arts movement.
  • Maigstrates in Kentucky have refused to endorse a grant application from Whitesburg’s Appalshop because of an alleged unpatriotic remark by a DJ on WMMT-FM, reports the Associated Press. Appalshop operates WMMT, a community radio station.
  • The Daily Northwestern goes behind the scenes at NPR’s Wait, Wait … Don’t Tell Me! Host Peter Sagal acknowledges he’s achieve a modicum of fame but will “never reach Bitch Goddess level.” (Via Romenesko.)
  • After fielding more advocates on the Hill than ever before, APTS reported that Congress had reduced the amount it will rescind from this year’s CPB funding. Instead of cutting $10 mil to $15 mil, Congress applied a smaller cut of 0.65% or $2.37 million. APTS called it a “tremendous victory.” Congress also agreed to lay out its largest amount for the digital transition — $48.7 million — in addition to $43.5 million for PTFP, which will spend much of its budget this year on digital.
  • Some Pacificans are urging the network’s board to guarantee seats for women and people of color.
  • The theme of this year’s Public Radio Collaboration (Nov. 1-9) is democracy in America.
  • WRYR in Churchton, Md., one of the first low-power FM stations to go on the air, is “definitely starting to catch on,” says founder Mike Shay in the Baltimore Sun.