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Jun 30, 2009
Public Radio Tech Survey kicks off July 27
Lightbulbs going off all over Aspen as pubcasters mingle at Ideas Festival
AlaskaOne terminates staff, shifts to live children's feed
Burns requests Dust Bowl memories of Oklahomans for film
EDCAR's new name: PBS Digital Learning Library
Familiar metaphorical smell snagged hosting job for Tyson
G4 comments to FCC on possible ethnicity, gender ID filing requirements
Jun 29, 2009
CPB launches emergency readiness cooperative project
Pennsylvania stations join forces for pubcasting Advocacy Day
NYSE bells ring in "Super Why!" toys
Filmmakers working to weather recession
Florida writer wants to see CPB "extinct"
NPR crowdsourcing project: Who is that lobbyist?
Jun 28, 2009
$1 million Chinese jade sets "Roadshow" appraisal record
Jun 26, 2009
American Archives Pilot stations chosen
Think of all the stories we could share
"NOW" shows spark viewer reaction, ombudsman column
NPR, WNET to participate in investigative conference
Senate okays FCC, NTIA heads
Radio Bilingue, WPFW covering Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Jun 25, 2009
KCET confirms layoffs, cost cuts
If you're a media maker, try for a grant
WPSU at Penn State ends two shows, trims eight positions
Jun 24, 2009
Those %&$*@#! technical difficulties
Getler delves into the Three Nons
KQED chief Jeff Clarke to retire
Jeff Clarke, a leader among pubcasting station executives during his 44 years in broadcasting, announced his plans to retire next June as president of Northern California Public Broadcasting. Since Clarke joined San Francisco's KQED-TV/FM as president in 2002, the organization dramatically expanded its television, radio and web operations, despite having to periodically trim spending and staff. Clarke helmed HoustonPBS during most of the 1990s and plans to retire in Houston, where his family resides. Clarke's accomplishments include creating ground-breaking new media strategies for public broadcasting, PBS President Paula Kerger tells the San Francisco Chronicle. Kerger cites Quest, a multimedia series devoted to science and nature in the Bay Area. Launched in 2006, the series is an example of the "content vertical" websites that NPR and CPB are encouraging more stations to develop. "As we look at our work in the future, being able to seize the power of new media is going to be profoundly important," Kerger says. "KQED under Jeff has been on the cutting edge of that work." Clarke also led public broadcasting nationally as a board member of PBS and American Public Television, among other entities. During the 2005 controversy over CPB Board Chairman Kenneth's Tomlinson's campaign to inject political ideology into programming decisions, Clarke penned this editorial defending public broadcasting's editorial independence.
Jun 23, 2009
"30 Minute Music Hour" rocks on
New theater coming for Austin City Limits
WashPo, CQ veteran to join NPR Digital
NPR hired Mark Stencel, a veteran of the Washington Post and Congressional Quarterly, as its new managing editor of digital news. "His mix of experience in breaking news, political reporting, digital innovation, technology leadership and the business is wholly unique and impressive," wrote his new NPR bosses Dick Meyer and Kinsey Wilson in this memo announcing the appointment. Stencel is leaving Governing magazine and Governing.com, where he is executive editor, deputy publisher and a columnist/blogger.
Sesame Street coming soon to Tampa Bay's Busch Gardens
Smiley brings 37 pizzerias to Indiana
Ombud's advice on the torture question: "show don't tell"
KCET drops its 45-year-old program guide
Ex-GPBer indicted in theft of $21,000
Jun 22, 2009
You Must Hear This new ATC segment
RIP Llewellyn's TV
Renewal funding, new e.p. for "The Takeaway"
Transition returns MHz to airwaves
KMBH warns of "scam or fantasy" as its critics seek support for a new station
Jun 19, 2009
House votes to restore PTFP funding
WFSU and WMFE end reading service for the sight-impaired
Jun 18, 2009
New York pubcaster inspires documentary
Colorado Public Radio reduces then freezes wages
WHYY ends longtime show, terminates staffers, closes bureau
Jun 17, 2009
Tampa's WEDU and WUSF "fight bitterly," paper reports
Dish Network entering new carriage talks, rep tells congresswoman
A representative of Dish Network told Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) yesterday that the satcaster is planning new talks with noncom TV stations on multicast or HD signal carriage, reports Broadcasting & Cable. Cable operators and DirecTV already have such deals. Eshoo introduced a bill that would force such carriage, citing public interest. Jeffrey Davis, spokesman for the Association of Public Television Stations, told Current in a statement that Dish Network, for the most part, is not carrying local public television stations in HD in any markets except Hawaii and Alaska, where carriage is federally mandated. The statement added: "It is our sincere hope that Dish and public television can reach a private agreement. However, in the absence of such an agreement and the unwillingness of Dish to engage in meaningful negotiations, we are encouraging Congress to step in to correct this market failure and ensure that Americans have full access to high quality programming created by local public television stations." (See Current's Jan. 21, 2008, story for more on the issue.)
State budget woes force WQLN cuts
CPB to invest in local news collaboratives for pubradio
Jun 16, 2009
Latin American Discovery Channel to carry Sesame Workshop show
Can Planet Money be a money maker?
PBS board okays "three nons" requirement
Doug Mitchell honored for pubradio journalism training
Public Radio News Directors Inc. presented its Leo C. Lee Award to former NPR producer Doug Mitchell. The award, which honors distinguished contributions to public radio journalism, recognized Mitchell's work to "encourage young people - and particularly young people of color - to get into public radio," PRNDI announced on its website.
Mitchell, who left NPR in lay-offs announced in December, is a 20-year veteran of NPR News, and he worked for over a decade to establish a public radio journalism program for young people. Through Next Generation Radio, as the training program was called, "Doug did what a trainer is supposed to do--encapsulate the best values of the organization and transmit them intact to a new generation," wrote former NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin, in a blog posting about the loss of present and future talent with Mitchell's exit. "Using the metaphor of these days, he was a Moses to their Joshua."
Mitchell recently explained his motivation in creating the program on Transom: "[F]or 15 of my 21.5 years at NPR, my version of teaching was giving back. That’s an old-school term meaning that at one point in my life someone helped me, and after a period of time, I 'gave it back' to someone else who needed help."
The PRNDI award is named for the late Leo C. Lee, a newspaperman who became a western bureau chief for NPR and later founded Western States Public Radio. Lee also established a training program to prepare young journalists, including women and minorities, for careers in public radio. Previous award recipients include former NPR News chief Bill Buzenberg, the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, longtime Marketplace executive producer Jim Russell, NPR investigative reporter Daniel Zwerdling, and producers David Isay and Ira Glass.
Jun 15, 2009
"Saddle Up" launches new website
Jun 14, 2009
"Bruno" staffer cited PBS as possible destination for film
Jun 13, 2009
FCC handles flood of 700,000 DTV callers this week
Jun 12, 2009
WFUV covering Bonnaroo Music Festival
Suffice to say FCC's DTV call center is busy
Pubcasting, unplugged
Coming soon: Public broadcasting funding votes in House
Anti-LPFM arguments refuted in Hill hearing
Aspirations that go beyond driveway moments
Markey takes a moment to mark today's final DTV transition
Jun 11, 2009
Forty-five positions gone as PBS works to balance budget
NewsHour collaborations are up and running
WNETers take a run for charity
Perhaps Gwyneth prefers green eggs?
NPR to memorialize longtime pubmedia producer Sheryl Flowers
"Mosque" doc especially pertinent now, filmmaker says
More "WordGirls" coming to PBS
OPB transmitter returns after lightning short-out
Jun 10, 2009
CapHill reality show fizzles
WDUQ campaign includes appeals for NPR
Another cash infusion for Gather.com
Jun 9, 2009
Texas-sized deal to bring Triple A to Dallas
Can funder-filmmaker relationships be saved? Perhaps The Prenups can help
Prepare now to receive emergency info after DTV transition, Red Cross warns
Think tank examines Budget Hero user data
Station cuts continue, Wisconsin hit
APTS Twittering, Facebooking
Jun 8, 2009
CPB DDF grant info available
NPR appoints new operations/ finance senior veep
Site monkeys around with humor research including pubradio shows
U of Florida media consolidation affects pubradio stations
Three students' work honors Fred Rogers' spirit
LPFM advocates score victory
Jun 5, 2009
Viewers continue to react to 'We Shall Remain'
Actor REALLY thinks PBS should have Tonys show
KRVS transitions into new studio
Jun 4, 2009
PBS: Please Buy Stuff?
Mashable casts NPR as the "future of mainstream media"
What are foundations backing in journalism?
Of the 115 projects in the project database, three received nearly half the funding, including ProPublica, which got $30 mil from the Sandler Family Supporting Foundation. Also among the field’s top 10 funders: Knight Foundation, $11.2 mil; California HealthCare Foundation, $8.7 mil; Pew Charitable Trusts, $7.5 mil (mostly to Stateline.org); Schuster Foundation, $5 mil (to Brandeis University’s Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism); Irvine, $4.8 mil; Chicago Community Trust, $3.6 mil; William Penn Fndn, $2.6 mil; Atlantic Philanthropies, $2.7 mil; and Ford Fndn, $2.4 mil.
Second in the field of funders is California HealthCare Foundation was created as part of the pact when nonprofit Blue Cross of California was converted to for-profit WellPoint Health Networks [10-year report in PDF].
A notable departure among the funders: JEHT Foundation closed in January because its assets were managed by all-star crook Bernard Madoff.