Nice Above Fold - Page 383

  • By the numbers: Public radio continues to gain on public TV in key metrics

    A CPB analysis shows that public TV stations are raising more money from fewer members.
  • KCRW receives $1 million grant for new reporting series

    The new series will cover disadvantaged and marginalized residents in Los Angeles.
  • Kansas governor proposes 18 percent cut to pubcasting support

    Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback (R) has proposed reducing state funding for public broadcasting by $100,000 for fiscal year 2016, a 16 percent cut from this fiscal year. Brownback’s proposed budget calls for a two-part reduction in funding that would cut state support by $12,000 this fiscal year, to $600,000, and then to $500,000 for fiscal years 2016 and 2017. Eugene Williams, c.e.o. of KTWU-TV in Topeka, was not surprised by the proposed cut, since Brownback has consistently opposed state funding of public broadcasting. Williams had already adjusted his station’s budget to prepare for cuts in state support. KTWU’s received $50,000 in state funds this fiscal year, down from a high of $300,000 in previous years.
  • Texas's KEDT builds on alliance with local college

    One of the smallest independent public broadcasting operations in the country will move into new facilities this fall under its expanding partnership with a local community college. For more than 40 years, KEDT-TV/FM in Corpus Christi, Texas, has been housed in a strip mall in what was originally meant to be a temporary location. Its unusual agreement with the city’s Del Mar College preserves its independence as a community pubcasting licensee while allowing the two institutions to share content and a state-of-the art broadcast and production facility, the new KEDT Center for Educational Broadcasting. Under construction after a ceremonial groundbreaking last fall, the center will be located on a prime site adjacent and connected to Del Mar College’s Center for Economic Development, and offer amenities such as an outdoor performance plaza wired for live broadcasts.
  • Filmmakers push for common carriage at first stop in public TV 'listening tour'

    The discussion was friendly, but emotions ran high as filmmakers and public TV executives examined their often stormy relationship.
  • Pipeline addendum: more public TV productions in the works for 2015

    This list supplements Current’s Pipeline 2015, published in November 2014 and based on responses to our annual survey of public TV producers. Programs appearing in this update, three of which are offered for national broadcast this winter season, went to contract late last year or were submitted after the deadline for the earlier list. Winter ’15 Mia, A Dancer’s Journey Producing organizations: Slavenska Dance Preservation Inc., PBS SoCaL. Distributor: NETA. Length: 1 x 60. Status: complete. Major funders: NEA Art Works, Women in Film Foundation Finishing Fund, Dance Films Association, Herman Lissner Foundation, Tcherepnin Foundation, Phil and Mary Lyons, Mladen and Nada Buntich.
  • Storify: PBS, indie filmmakers hold first "listening tour" event in San Francisco

    Tweets from the Jan. 17 meeting at the San Francisco Public Library.
  • Slate of upcoming PBS shows includes specials on Vietnam War, American music

    Masterpiece's "Poldark," which premieres in June, might also enjoy additional seasons on the network.
  • How to set boundaries at work — and save your sanity

    Mike and Kim had worked together for many years at a large public broadcasting organization. He was a manager, and she was a senior attorney; they often collaborated but reported to different bosses. One day, during what seemed to be a routine conversation in Kim’s office, she cursed and berated Mike about his work. Afterwards, Mike faced a tough choice: risk escalating the conflict by speaking up about Kim’s inappropriate behavior or remain silent in hopes that that the outburst would be an isolated incident. Although this scenario may seem extreme, it’s a situation that many people encounter in the workplace, where too often people do not speak up for themselves and find that they’re treated with disrespect.
  • PBS joins BBC, BBC Worldwide in co-production deal

    PBS President Paula Kerger announced the deal Monday at the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif.
  • Pacifica Radio Archives unearths missing 1964 London speech by Martin Luther King Jr.

    Fifty years ago, Pacifica Radio correspondent Saul Bernstein recorded a 62-minute speech delivered in London by Martin Luther King Jr., in which the civil rights leader spoke about apartheid and the then-recent sentencing of Nelson Mandela. The recording, believed to be the only full record of King’s speech, was thought to be lost to time. But a half-century later, Pacifica Archives Director Brian DeShazor uncovered Bernstein’s recording in a dusty box while working on a Saturday, researching another project, “American Women Making History & Culture, 1963-1982,” a two-year effort funded by the National Archives to preserve hundreds of recordings. Now listeners to Democracy Now!
  • Last Days lands Oscar nom; CPI, ProPublica recognized for data projects

    Last Days in Vietnam scored PBS’s American Experience its ninth Academy Award nomination. Rory Kennedy produced and directed the film for AmEx, a documentary series that has run since 1995. CPB provided support for the film. Last Days in Vietnam was nominated in the Best Documentary category, marking Kennedy’s first nomination. “When we conceived of this film three years ago, we knew it was a powerful story of individual acts of courage set against a background of chaos,” said American Experience Executive Producer Mark Samels on the show’s blog. “But we didn’t know how relevant it would prove to be.