Public Media’s ‘Dreadnought’ pulling into port at KETC
December 21, 2009 by John Proffitt · Leave a Comment
Run, don’t walk, to Robert Paterson’s blog to read his new post on the transformation in progress at KETC in St. Louis.
No one knows exactly what forms public service media companies will take in the future, and it’s likely that several successful forms will appear. But KETC looks to be the first in the nation to have commissioned the construction of a new model.
Paterson has been working with KETC since before the launch of the Facing the Mortgage Crisis project, which started at KETC and then expanded to 30 more public broadcasters across the country with the help of the CPB. He’s been lucky enough to work with CEO Jack Galmiche and crew and to see this transformation up close. The plans — physical and logical — are remarkable.
What KETC is doing is revolutionary in the public broadcasting world. While the particulars may not fit every station nationwide, the themes should. Whether or not each element in the plan is “perfect” is irrelevant — the most important thing is that they’re experimenting, all within a reformulated goal. KETC is getting passionate about public service media, and not merely public broadcasting.
Read that post. It’s insightful and exciting.
NPR stations vs. The Future
March 7, 2008 by John Proffitt · Leave a Comment
I commented on Robert Paterson’s blog this morning, and wanted to reproduce the full comment here for the record. And because it was kind of a long comment — it’s better suited to being a post, really.
I’m not sure if I’ll comment any further on the Ken Stern developments directly. Perhaps — it’s definitely disturbing to see this turn of events. But I’d rather wait to see what else comes out in the next day or so. NPR’s reporters have already lifted the veil further today than they did yesterday.
In any case, here’s the full comment left over at Paterson’s site…
The Paterson innovation series
March 3, 2008 by John Proffitt · Leave a Comment
Robert Paterson has begun a multi-part series on innovation in the public media space around the country. For anyone laboring on new media projects or working to promote new media (especially connective community media), this is a must-read series.
The posts so far…
- The Future of Public radio – How Torey Malatia is solving the Innovator’s Dilemma
- Innovator’s Dilemma – Public Media – Sound Familiar?
- Making real progress in Public Media – Acknowledging the Innovator’s Dilemma
I’m expecting more posts soon, probably on KETC’s work in St. Louis (building community around shared media and history), WOSU’s work in Columbus (bringing the online community into station engagement), and Ideastream in Cleveland (blending a dual licensee with fellow nonprofits and the community).