Aug 31, 2009
'Self-indulgent' reports had him 'screaming at his radio'
Six pubcasting towers in the line of wildfire on Mt. Wilson
Pubcasting shows score Daytime Creative Arts Emmys
Aug 28, 2009
Stroud disengages in Madison
Now on PBS heading to MIPCOM
Farewell, Reading Rainbow
Aug 27, 2009
News site posts controversial WYCC videos
University agrees to postpone WLIU sale
Aug 26, 2009
CPB looking for researchers on tent-pole strategy
How much is Martha's stinky chair worth? Stay tuned ...
BBC production going green, slowly
Aug 25, 2009
Oh that Julia!
Julia's book sales: proof of the power of movie publicity
You might attend SXSW next March?
Aug 24, 2009
Judicial Watch sues FCC over DTV delay documents
Aug 23, 2009
A return to culture wars ahead?
Aug 22, 2009
9/11 conspiracy doc is a top pledge show for Denver
Aug 21, 2009
Pubradio's Diane Rehm recuperating from a fall
Stations receive STEM content grants
Aug 20, 2009
Julia Child, toaster-oven chef
What does it mean to be a "NextGen" station?
Aug 19, 2009
What's on magazine covers? Faces!
La, la, la, LINOLEUM....
Aug 18, 2009
Chance meeting charms PBS Hawaii staff
Twelve WUFT employees riffed in Gainesville
Aug 17, 2009
PBS cancels Dev Con, folds it into broader spring conference
Sesame to introduce several new shows at confab in France
Savidge shifts from anchor chair at Worldfocus
Community Broadcasters Association closes
Iraqi troops returned with Muppet booty in 1990 invasion
Early review of NPR's new News app: "awesome"
Aug 14, 2009
The cost of dismissing Ken Stern as NPR chief
Aug 12, 2009
Cutting costs means cutting airshifts for KUT DJs
Aug 11, 2009
Long Island's WLIU up for sale
Arbitron analyzes ratings trends by pubradio format
Aug 10, 2009
Senate okays Patricia Cahill for CPB board
PBS posts interviews from press tour
Rock Hall honors Austin City Limits with landmark designation
Aug 7, 2009
CPB reaches new pact for webcasting royalties
Aug 6, 2009
NPR gets flak for what Liasson said on FOX
Ed Walker strolls into the Radio Hall of Fame
Viewers may move to front of the line in PBS funding credits
PBS head Paula Kerger said it's considering shifting that well-known phrase " ... and viewers like you ... " to the front of underwriting acknowledgments, something Pittsburgh's WQED has already done. "The truth is the majority of our support comes from individual philanthropy and I do think we need to do a better job of making sure people recognize that," Kerger told assembled television critics at their tour in Pasadena, Calif., this week. As for WQED, "I know we've been talking to them about the implementation. Obviously, part of the reason we're interested is to help stations signal value in their own communities."
Pete Seeger connects with web visitors via PBS Engage
WNED in Buffalo restructures top management
Aug 5, 2009
The difference pubcasting makes for a community in crisis
Today's fascinating pubcasting factoid
Aug 4, 2009
Letting NPR raise money is a "no brainer"
"NPR can leverage its brand and economies of scale to conduct direct mail and email acquisition campaigns. What seems cost-prohibitive to many local stations is very affordable on a national level. All that’s needed is a model for making sure that all boats rise together."
"And that’s the crux of the matter. Public radio has the wrong discussion when it talks about who should be asking for money. That’s a no-brainer. Everyone who can ask efficiently and effectively should be asking. This American Life is proof of the power in national fundraising."
As Sutton points out, Public Radio International, American Public Media and any number of independent producers (here and here) already solicit direct listener contributions. When Barbara Appleby, NPR director of new revenue strategies, looked into how many public radio entities were raising money online last year, she counted "well over 50," she told Current. The appeals varied from requests for donations from podcast listeners to e-mail blasts to supporters, she said.
In focus groups, some listeners talk about supporting their local station as well as a podcast. "They say, 'I pay for that, too,'" Appleby said. "There's some level of sophistication with listeners in understanding the difference."
A story in the latest edition of Current reports that NPR and six stations are moving forward with one national fundraiser that Appleby first proposed last fall. The three-month test of online fundraising websites is scheduled to begin next month.
Your overseas pubcasting update
WNED shows off its show at press tour
Going Mad for Sesame Street
Aug 3, 2009
The story of an unexpected gift for NPR
WYCC target of federal lawsuit
Aug 2, 2009
Press tour gets preview of PBS plans
-- Curious George is getting his own app. The Curious George Coloring Book App "is designed to encourage color experimentation across a full spectrum of hues," according to PBS. There's a palette with 45 colors, 48 coloring pages and a personal art gallery. Kids can email artwork or post to Facebook pages. It'll cost $2.99.
-- At PBSKidsGo.org, Wilson & Ditch: Digging America, produced by the Jim Henson Co., will take kids ages 6 to 10 on a cross-country adventure with two gophers as they explore America. There'll be webisodes, a travel blog, on-location audio podcasts and original comics.
-- David Tennant just gets busier. He's reprising the role of Hamlet for a TV adaptation of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s 2008 stage production for Great Performances in 2010, and makes his debut in October as host of Masterpiece Contemporary. You may know him as Doctor Who on BBC.
-- Three new docs for 2010 will explore faith and religious expression: "God in America," a six-hour series from American Experience and Frontline, spans more than 500 years; "The Buddha" relates the life of the Indian who achieved enlightenment beneath a fig tree more than 2,000 years ago; and "The Calling," a four-hour series that follows eight individuals on their challenging journeys into the clergy from the perspective of Islam, Catholicism, Evangelical Christianity and Judaism.
-- Sesame Street is planning a Muppet parody of -- ready for this? -- the retro smash TV hit Mad Men. Miranda Barry, Sesame Workshop e.v.p., said it won't be the first time the kids' classic has created its own take on a show. "You may have seen our parody called 'Desperate Houseplants.' It was about a houseplant not getting its needs met by the gardener," she told critics. "So it always works on two levels." Also new on the Street: A segmented format and host Murray Muppet. Also, here's a PBS interview on YouTube with Ken Burns at the tour, which ends today.