Nice Above Fold - Page 743
Web analytics director at PBS details Web research techniques
A Google Analytics blog post provides a peek inside PBS’s Web development strategy. Amy Sample, PBS Interactive web analytics director, discusses how analysis of users’ video viewing behavior on PBS.org and PBSKIDS.org led to the development of the PBS Video and PBS Kids Go! sites. Future research includes working to gauge impact of online content on TV viewing, and tracking online donations.Former NPR staffer faces sentence on child-porn charges
The sentencing process began yesterday for former NPR science correspondent and editor David Malakoff, who pleaded guilty in March to a felony child porn possession charge after evidence was found that he possessed illicit material on his NPR computer between April and June 2008. A young woman whose rape at 10 years old was the subject of one of the videos on Malakoff’s computer is working with the prosecution. Malakoff resigned from NPR that June. He could receive more than eight years in prison and will be sentenced Thursday. A biography of Malakoff is here (scroll down). NPR told Current in an e-mail: “This is a legal matter involving a former employee, and as such we have no comment.”WNYC acquires Times Co.'s classical WQXR
A three-party radio deal announced today in New York will bring WQXR, a classical music station operated by the New York Times Company, under the ownership of WNYC. The agreement involves a frequency swap with Spanish-language broadcaster Univision, which will take over the 96.3 FM frequency where WQXR now broadcasts classical music. Pending FCC approval, WQXR will move to a weaker signal on 105.9 FM and program classical music as a service of WNYC. The Times Company will receive $45 million from the sale, $11.5 million of which will be paid by WNYC for the WQXR license, transmission equipment, call letters and website.
Atop Emmy news and doc nominations list: PBS with 41
PBS dominated the News & Documentary Emmy Award nominations (PDF) announced today, with 41 nods. Closest competitors are CBS with 23, and 13 each for ABC and HBO/Cinemax. POV scored 10 nominations; Frontline, seven; and Nova, four. One strong category: Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story/Long Form, with PBS taking four of five spots. Winners will be announced Sept. 21 in New York City.FCC pondering broadcast journalism
Outgoing acting FCC chair Michael Copps, in an interview with Multicast News, reveals the commission is working on a notice of inquiry on the future of broadcast journalism. A broad discussion on the state of journalism in America “is something to take a little while. You are going to need to assemble the best brains, and people from different sectors of the communications world and let them come and reason together and see if they can help us chart a path to a media future,” Copps said.Radio Bilingue to develop new pubmedia service for Los Angeles
CPB has awarded a $2 million grant to Radio Bilingue to design and develop a multiplatform English language program service for young Latinos in Los Angeles. Radio Bilingue, which produces and distributes Spanish-language news and cultural programming airing on stations in the U.S. and Mexico, will take several months to develop programming before launching the new service in 2010. “Los Angeles sits at the juncture of diversity and new media and this is an opportunity to create a national model for public media innovation,” said CPB President Patricia Harrison in a news release. “This service, developed by Radio Bilingue, will serve and represent a new community of listeners through fresh and innovative content.”
Movie-making kids getting their big break on KCSM
KCSM in San Mateo, no longer a PBS member station due to financial woes, “plans to fill the PBS void” by airing more local shows including its Spotlight! series, in which high-school filmmakers create three- to five-minute flicks, according to The Daily Journal. Some of the aspiring movie mavens are as young as 14. They’re mentored by a staff of pros including producers, screenwriters and special-effects experts and get to premiere their work on KCSM.Electric Company heads to weekday feed
PBS is expanding its weekly feed of The Electric Company to each weekday starting Sept. 7, reports Variety. The show, which kicked off in January, is currently the top performer on the PBS Kids Go! Block this year, and has streamed more than 10 million videos at its website.PBS Sotomayor coverage will also run in Spanish
PBS and impreMedia will stream NewsHour’s feed of Senate confirmation hearings for Judge Sonia Sotomayor this week, translated into Spanish. The feed will run on impreMedia’s website, according to a joint statement issued today. Arturo Duran, CEO of impreMedia Digital, noted in the statement that this is the first time in the Supreme Court’s history that a potential justice grew up speaking Spanish.Co-host excoriates WQED for recent layoff decisions
For three years, Pittsburgh lawyer, law professor and political analyst Joseph Sabino Mistick has co-hosted WQED’s Roddey v. Mistick, a local political debate show. But now he’s written a revealing column for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review regarding the recent WQED layoffs that he thinks “will surely put an end to my role” at the station. Among his claims: “With six executives making six figures-plus … the station’s layoffs include a janitor, a mailroom clerk and a part-time graphic artist who is a single mother.” Furthermore, “This may no longer be a rank-and-file town, but we still have that sense of fairness and equity that was nurtured over generations.Pubcasting provided USA Network CEO with valuable experience
Newsweek reports that USA Network CEO Bonnie Hammer’s first TV job was in 1974 at WGBH on Infinity Factory. Among her duties, the mag says: “Scooping up excrement from one of the show’s costars, a sheepdog.”PRDMC crowd hears of KPLU online successes
This year’s Public Radio Development and Marketing Conference has wrapped up in San Diego. Keith York of KPBS, who covered it for his PMD site, reports that “The Skinny on Online Sponsorship” was one interesting session. In it, KPLU in Seattle/Tacoma reported it’s made $250,000 off its Around the House webpage, where listeners interact and experts lend advice to homeowners. Also successful is its Buy Local page, with five sponsors so far, that touts locally produced foods. The “advertorial” content is created by the underwriting staff. (For more on online sponsorship models, see Current’s October 2008 story.) Now that the confab is over, Current is waiting to hear who won the two free trips: Nine days on Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, and a Christmas market tour of Salzburg, Linz, Vienna and Prague.House subcom okays $40M in station funds
Emergency funds for pubcastingcleared an important hurdle today, as the House’s Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies subcom approved $40 million in “meaningful, urgent relief directly to local stations,” according to an APTS statement. President and CEO Larry Sidman added, “All of public broadcasting is deeply grateful to Chairman [David] Obey [D-Wisc.] and his subcommittee members for providing desperately needed support to stations battered by the most prolonged recession since World War II.” Next steps: The bill progresses to that chamber’s Appropriations Committee, and on to the House floor. The Senate also needs to weigh in. On Capitol Hill Day in February, APTS and station reps lobbied for a $211 million supplemental appropriation for FY2010, or what Sidman termed “an emergency infusion of funding” (Current, Feb.Pubcasting show's ideas didn't help retailer Smith & Hawken
High-end outdoor accessories retailer Smith & Hawken is going out of business. What does that have to do with pubcasting? Founding partner Paul Hawken was producer and host of the 17-part series Growing a Business that aired on PBS; it focused on owning and running a socially conscious company. According to Hawken’s biography, the program ultimately played in 115 countries and was watched by more than 100 million viewers. Ten 30-minute episodes ran from November 1987 to November 1990 on PBS.Donor foundation "concerned" about WQED's future
WQED’s cutbacks are affecting not only station personnel, but also donor foundations’ confidence in the station, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “We are concerned about WQED’s future and we care about its mission,” said John Ellis, spokesman for the Pittsburgh Foundation, which has donated more than $600,000 over the past five years. “Like most public service TV stations across the country, WQED needs to develop a sustainable model for public service television in this region and we hope they’re successful in that endeavor.” WQED Multimedia President George Miles promised to present foundations with a new strategic planby July.
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