Nice Above Fold - Page 776
APTS appeals to states on funding
The Association of Public Television Stations is “issuing a plea” to governors and state legislatures to “invest in local public television stations,” according to a statement it issued today. It cited Pennsylvania, Indiana, New York and Virginia as states either slashing or eliminating pubTV funding. “State governments are essential investors in local public television stations, providing vital resources to enable stations to fulfill their educational missions,” APTS President Larry Sidman said in the statement. The National Governors Association is meeting with President Barack Obama this week in Washington.'Book Guys' ends run
The Book Guys, a syndicated show about book collecting carried on some 30 pubradio stations, is going off the air this week. Co-hosts Allan Stypeck and Mike Cuthbert couldn’t find a national underwriter. The show began in the 1980s in Washington state and was syndicated in the late 1990s. The two interviewed researchers, novelists, publishers, autograph experts, book conservators, printers and book craftsmen. Nine archived shows are available on their website.Individual giving topic of chat
The transcript for today’s online chat, “How to Solicit Gifts from Individuals,” is now available at the Chronicle of Philanthropy’s website. The subject is especially timely in the current economic environment. Questions include, “At what level of giving (what size of gift) would you consider it’s appropriate to start making face-to-face appeals to individuals?” and “What are some good tips for soliciting second gifts from major donors whose pledges have been completed?”
Sesame Street heads to Dubai
Sesame Workshop has signed an agreement with Universal Parks & Resorts for three Sesame Street-themed attractions at Universal Studios Dubailand. Included will be a Sesame Street 4-D Movie Magic theater, a Sesame Street carousel and live stage show, and Elmo’s Emporium to sell Sesame Street merchandise. Universal Studios Dubailand is currently under construction.Fund raising during a recession
As the public broadcasting system well knows, raising money during a severe recession is a daunting challenge. The Chronicle of Philanthropy’s special report, Raising Money in Hard Times, details 10 strategies that nonprofits are using to continue to bring in funds.White spaces locator site launches
A new website may be of use to TV stations to verify their digital coverage areas. The “white spaces” locator site, ShowMyWhiteSpace.com, retrieves FCC database information daily for its updates. Last fall the FCC authorized the use of the white spaces between TV channels for mobile broadband, radios and other devices. Broadcasters protested those devices may interfere with DTV reception.
Former CNN anchor to helm WNET doc
Miles O’Brien, a 16-year CNN veteran and Peabody award winner, will anchor and report for the WNET program A Tale of Three Cities, a segment of the Blueprint America project that focuses on American infrastructure. The show features what Portland, Denver, and New York are doing to meet the challenges of their crumbling infrastructures.Do 'high ideals' hinder public broadcasting?
“Nonprofit media continues to hold itself out as a beacon in today’s media world, which is dominated by ever-coarsening public dialogue,” writes Jonathan Berr in AOL’s Daily Finance site. “These high ideals, however, may not be compatible with the current fiscal reality.”Prof warns of legislative dangers to public access TV
Public access TV is in danger, writes Jonathan Nichols-Pethick, assistant professor of communication and theatre at DePauw University. Pending legislation in various states threatens to make the local channels extinct. “As media educators, activists, practitioners, and just plain concerned citizens, we need to focus our critical attention on the proper target,” he contends, urging readers to take actions including putting pressure on city councils, working with nonprofit organizations that oversee the channels, and encouraging students to produce programs for the stations. His essay is titled, Terminating Public Access Television.The man inside Big Bird and Oscar speaks
Caroll Spinney, 75, has played Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch on Sesame Street for the past 40 years. As Sesame Street turns 40, Spinney recalls: “When, I joined Jim [Henson], I asked, ‘what is Big Bird like?’ He said, ‘That’s up to you. I’m giving you free reign on developing the character.'”FCC issues more DTV transition directions
TV stations have until March 17 to tell the FCC when they will be transitioning to DTV before June 12. The commission released the order (PDF) Friday. It also recommends that stations not transition before April 16.Online chat to focus on courting individual donors
How to better appeal to individual donors is the topic of the next online discussion hosted by The Chronicle of Philanthropy. Click there at noon Feb. 24 to participate.Obama Web strategist says ditch the e-newsletters
Thomas Gensemer, the brain behind then-Sen. Barack Obama’s Web-based election campaign, says nonprofits should forgo email newsletters and focus on short, more personal email notes providing specific instructions for participation in fund-raising efforts. “Email newsletters don’t get read, yet they take more effort to prepare than a 250-word email,” he told an audience at City University in London this week. “Email is still a killer application, but only when used properly.”Muppets pop up on hot blog topics
The economic stimulus package was the biggest topic in the blogosphere last week, but guess what else showed up? Some 6 percent of bloggers mentioned Sesame Street’s Muppet characters, according to a weekly survey by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. After CNN posted a story from the archives of the Mental Floss blog, online writers began to ponder their own fave Muppets. As one wrote, “My nickname in middle school was Fozzy the Bear because I was always constantly telling bad jokes.”BBC doc focuses on Kitchen Sisters
BBC Radio’s World Service offers an audio feature by Alan Hall about the Kitchen Sisters, Nikki Silva and Davia Nelson. “Programme one captures Davia at the duo’s production office in Francis Ford Coppola’s Zoetrope building in San Francisco. It then travels south to glimpse Nikki on the commune where she lives and where their radio stories take shape.”
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