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Credentials Criteria 2018-19 Division I Men's Basketball
CREDENTIALS CRITERIA 2018-19 DIVISION I MEN’S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP The NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee has reiterated its opposition to all forms of sports wagering and encourages the media to assist in the education of the public with regard to the hazards of sports wagering. Agencies shall direct requests for working media credentials for the First Four, first/second rounds and regionals to the host media coordinator, while requests for the Final Four shall be directed to the NCAA national office. If space is limited at preliminary-round sites, preference will be given to applications received before March 1. The deadline for submitting Final Four credential applications will be March 1. A “media agency” for purposes of these criteria shall mean a daily or weekly publication, cable system, radio station, television station or television network, or online entity requiring immediate news coverage. “Immediate news coverage” for purposes of these criteria shall mean that the editorial, audio and/or visual deadline for the tournament action being documented occurs not later than 48 hours after the competition at the site has been completed. Any agency that has been certified for a Final Four credential shall receive a First Four, first/second round and/or regional credential upon request. Agencies that do not meet the criteria for circulation (for print media) or designated market area (for electronic media), but represent the geographic area of a participating institution, must staff each of the participant’s previous tournament games in order to receive credentials to each subsequent game. At the discretion of the media coordinator, a minority media enterprise that does not meet established criteria may receive one media credential, space permitting. -
Seguimiento De Accesibilidad a La
SEGUIMIENTO DE ACCESIBILIDAD A LA TDT Informe de la CMT sobre accesibilidad de los contenidos televisivos Informe Económico Sectorial 2012 Comisión del Mercado de las Telecomunicaciones CMT Seguimiento de accesibilidad a la TDT ÍNDICE I. INTRODUCCIÓN ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Origen de los datos ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Operadores y canales incluidos en el informe ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Porcentajes y valores de los servicios de accesibilidad en la programación de los canales según la LGCA 7/2010 ................................................................................................................................................... 5 Canales de programación de nueva emisión .............................................................................................................................................................................................. 6 Información solicitada a los -
Connecting with Listeners: How Radio Stations Are Reaching Beyond the Dial (And Their Competitors) to Connect with Their Audience
Rochester Institute of Technology RIT Scholar Works Theses 8-13-2015 (Re)Connecting With Listeners: How Radio Stations are Reaching Beyond the Dial (and Their Competitors) to Connect With Their Audience Alyxandra Sherwood Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.rit.edu/theses Recommended Citation Sherwood, Alyxandra, "(Re)Connecting With Listeners: How Radio Stations are Reaching Beyond the Dial (and Their Competitors) to Connect With Their Audience" (2015). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by RIT Scholar Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of RIT Scholar Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Running head: (RE)CONNECTING WITH LISTENERS 1 The Rochester Institute of Technology School of Communication College of Liberal Arts (Re)Connecting With Listeners: How Radio Stations are Reaching Beyond the Dial (and Their Competitors) to Connect With Their Audience by Alyxandra Sherwood A Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the Master of Science degree in Communication & Media Technologies Degree Awarded: August 13, 2015 (RE)CONNECTING WITH LISTENERS 2 The members of the Committee approve the thesis of Alyxandra Sherwood presented on August 13, 2015. ___________________________________ Patrick Scanlon, Ph.D. Professor of Communication and Director School of Communication ___________________________________ Rudy Pugliese, Ph.D. Professor of Communication School of Communication Thesis Advisor ___________________________________ Michael J. Saffran, M.S. Lecturer and Faculty Director for WGSU-FM (89.3) Department of Communication State University of New York at Geneseo Thesis Advisor ___________________________________ Grant Cos, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Communication Director, Communication & Media Technologies Graduate Degree Program School of Communication (RE)CONNECTING WITH LISTENERS 3 Dedication The author wishes to thank Dr. -
The Pulitzer Prizes 2020 Winne
WINNERS AND FINALISTS 1917 TO PRESENT TABLE OF CONTENTS Excerpts from the Plan of Award ..............................................................2 PULITZER PRIZES IN JOURNALISM Public Service ...........................................................................................6 Reporting ...............................................................................................24 Local Reporting .....................................................................................27 Local Reporting, Edition Time ..............................................................32 Local General or Spot News Reporting ..................................................33 General News Reporting ........................................................................36 Spot News Reporting ............................................................................38 Breaking News Reporting .....................................................................39 Local Reporting, No Edition Time .......................................................45 Local Investigative or Specialized Reporting .........................................47 Investigative Reporting ..........................................................................50 Explanatory Journalism .........................................................................61 Explanatory Reporting ...........................................................................64 Specialized Reporting .............................................................................70 -
SAY NO to the LIBERAL MEDIA: CONSERVATIVES and CRITICISM of the NEWS MEDIA in the 1970S William Gillis Submitted to the Faculty
SAY NO TO THE LIBERAL MEDIA: CONSERVATIVES AND CRITICISM OF THE NEWS MEDIA IN THE 1970S William Gillis Submitted to the faculty of the University Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Journalism, Indiana University June 2013 ii Accepted by the Graduate Faculty, Indiana University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Doctoral Committee David Paul Nord, Ph.D. Mike Conway, Ph.D. Tony Fargo, Ph.D. Khalil Muhammad, Ph.D. May 10, 2013 iii Copyright © 2013 William Gillis iv Acknowledgments I would like to thank the helpful staff members at the Brigham Young University Harold B. Lee Library, the Detroit Public Library, Indiana University Libraries, the University of Kansas Kenneth Spencer Research Library, the University of Louisville Archives and Records Center, the University of Michigan Bentley Historical Library, the Wayne State University Walter P. Reuther Library, and the West Virginia State Archives and History Library. Since 2010 I have been employed as an editorial assistant at the Journal of American History, and I want to thank everyone at the Journal and the Organization of American Historians. I thank the following friends and colleagues: Jacob Groshek, Andrew J. Huebner, Michael Kapellas, Gerry Lanosga, J. Michael Lyons, Beth Marsh, Kevin Marsh, Eric Petenbrink, Sarah Rowley, and Cynthia Yaudes. I also thank the members of my dissertation committee: Mike Conway, Tony Fargo, and Khalil Muhammad. Simply put, my adviser and dissertation chair David Paul Nord has been great. Thanks, Dave. I would also like to thank my family, especially my parents, who have provided me with so much support in so many ways over the years. -
Having It All
Having It All How Public Radio Stations Can Provide Great Service and Live Within Their Means A report on the financial health of Public Radio, commissioned by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting BWB SOLUTIONS Table of Contents Executive Summary. 5 Methodology . 8 System-Wide Financial Health Trends . 9 Analysis of Financial and Audience Data. 10 Programming Expenses . 13 Financial Health Strategies. 15 Impact of Producing Programs Distributed Nationally . 17 Recommendations for Action . 19 Areas for Further Exploration . 21 Appendix A: National Producers . 22 Appendix B: Benchmark Studies . 23 Notes . 25 Having It All, Page 3 Acknowledgements This paper summarizes the work of many people Mark Handley, New Hampshire Public Radio and organizations in the public radio field. We would Earl Johnson, WABE-FM have been unable to complete this work without the Roger Johnson and Karen Olstad, KWSU-FM/AM generous commitments of time and information sup- John McCormack and Bill Miller, WUTC-FM plied by so many public radio industry leaders, con- Bill McGinley, WOI-AM sultants, heads of national organizations, and station Deborah Onslow, WMHT-FM managers. We would especially like to acknowledge Joan Rose, WUNC-FM the contributions of the members of the Project Greg Schnirring, Wisconsin Public Radio (now at CPB) Team at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting: Quyen Shanahan, WXPN-FM Vincent Curren, Duffy Winters, Jay Youngclaus, and Cary Smith, WBJC-FM Ted Coltman. Bruce Theriault of Bolder Strategies, John Stark, KNAU-FM Inc. provided valuable advice and counsel to the JoAnn Urofsky, WUSF-FM Project Team. Their collective insightful comments Stewart Vanderwilt, KUT-FM and careful guidance helped shape the study and the JoAnne Wallace, KQED-FM paper. -
N Ieman Reports
NIEMAN REPORTS Nieman Reports One Francis Avenue Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 Nieman Reports THE NIEMAN FOUNDATION FOR JOURNALISM AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY VOL. 62 NO. 1 SPRING 2008 VOL. 62 NO. 1 SPRING 2008 21 ST CENTURY MUCKRAKERS THE NIEMAN FOUNDATION HARVARDAT UNIVERSITY 21st Century Muckrakers Who Are They? How Do They Do Their Work? Words & Reflections: Secrets, Sources and Silencing Watchdogs Journalism 2.0 End Note went to the Carnegie Endowment in New York but of the Oakland Tribune, and Maynard was throw- found times to return to Cambridge—like many, ing out questions fast and furiously about my civil I had “withdrawal symptoms” after my Harvard rights coverage. I realized my interview was lasting ‘to promote and elevate the year—and would meet with Tenney. She came to longer than most, and I wondered, “Is he trying to my wedding in Toronto in 1984, and we tried to knock me out of competition?” Then I happened to keep in touch regularly. Several of our class, Peggy glance over at Tenney and got the only smile from standards of journalism’ Simpson, Peggy Engel, Kat Harting, and Nancy the group—and a warm, welcoming one it was. I Day visited Tenney in her assisted living facility felt calmer. Finally, when the interview ended, I in Cambridge some years ago, during a Nieman am happy to say, Maynard leaped out of his chair reunion. She cared little about her own problems and hugged me. Agnes Wahl Nieman and was always interested in others. Curator Jim Tenney was a unique woman, and I thoroughly Thomson was the public and intellectual face of enjoyed her friendship. -
Jazz and Radio in the United States: Mediation, Genre, and Patronage
Jazz and Radio in the United States: Mediation, Genre, and Patronage Aaron Joseph Johnson Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2014 © 2014 Aaron Joseph Johnson All rights reserved ABSTRACT Jazz and Radio in the United States: Mediation, Genre, and Patronage Aaron Joseph Johnson This dissertation is a study of jazz on American radio. The dissertation's meta-subjects are mediation, classification, and patronage in the presentation of music via distribution channels capable of reaching widespread audiences. The dissertation also addresses questions of race in the representation of jazz on radio. A central claim of the dissertation is that a given direction in jazz radio programming reflects the ideological, aesthetic, and political imperatives of a given broadcasting entity. I further argue that this ideological deployment of jazz can appear as conservative or progressive programming philosophies, and that these tendencies reflect discursive struggles over the identity of jazz. The first chapter, "Jazz on Noncommercial Radio," describes in some detail the current (circa 2013) taxonomy of American jazz radio. The remaining chapters are case studies of different aspects of jazz radio in the United States. Chapter 2, "Jazz is on the Left End of the Dial," presents considerable detail to the way the music is positioned on specific noncommercial stations. Chapter 3, "Duke Ellington and Radio," uses Ellington's multifaceted radio career (1925-1953) as radio bandleader, radio celebrity, and celebrity DJ to examine the medium's shifting relationship with jazz and black American creative ambition. -
New Solar Research Yukon's CKRW Is 50 Uganda
December 2019 Volume 65 No. 7 . New solar research . Yukon’s CKRW is 50 . Uganda: African monitor . Cape Greco goes silent . Radio art sells for $52m . Overseas Russian radio . Oban, Sheigra DXpeditions Hon. President* Bernard Brown, 130 Ashland Road West, Sutton-in-Ashfield, Notts. NG17 2HS Secretary* Herman Boel, Papeveld 3, B-9320 Erembodegem (Aalst), Vlaanderen (Belgium) +32-476-524258 [email protected] Treasurer* Martin Hall, Glackin, 199 Clashmore, Lochinver, Lairg, Sutherland IV27 4JQ 01571-855360 [email protected] MWN General Steve Whitt, Landsvale, High Catton, Yorkshire YO41 1EH Editor* 01759-373704 [email protected] (editorial & stop press news) Membership Paul Crankshaw, 3 North Neuk, Troon, Ayrshire KA10 6TT Secretary 01292-316008 [email protected] (all changes of name or address) MWN Despatch Peter Wells, 9 Hadlow Way, Lancing, Sussex BN15 9DE 01903 851517 [email protected] (printing/ despatch enquiries) Publisher VACANCY [email protected] (all orders for club publications & CDs) MWN Contributing Editors (* = MWC Officer; all addresses are UK unless indicated) DX Loggings Martin Hall, Glackin, 199 Clashmore, Lochinver, Lairg, Sutherland IV27 4JQ 01571-855360 [email protected] Mailbag Herman Boel, Papeveld 3, B-9320 Erembodegem (Aalst), Vlaanderen (Belgium) +32-476-524258 [email protected] Home Front John Williams, 100 Gravel Lane, Hemel Hempstead, Herts HP1 1SB 01442-408567 [email protected] Eurolog John Williams, 100 Gravel Lane, Hemel Hempstead, Herts HP1 1SB World News Ton Timmerman, H. Heijermanspln 10, 2024 JJ Haarlem, The Netherlands [email protected] Beacons/Utility Desk VACANCY [email protected] Central American Tore Larsson, Frejagatan 14A, SE-521 43 Falköping, Sweden Desk +-46-515-13702 fax: 00-46-515-723519 [email protected] S. -
Columbia Chronicle College Publications
Columbia College Chicago Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago Columbia Chronicle College Publications 12-3-1984 Columbia Chronicle (12/03/1984) Columbia College Chicago Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle Part of the Journalism Studies Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation Columbia College Chicago, "Columbia Chronicle (12/3/1984)" (December 3. 1984). Columbia Chronicle, College Publications, College Archives & Special Collections, Columbia College Chicago. http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle/70 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the College Publications at Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. It has been accepted for inclusion in Columbia Chronicle by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. Sting's Ronco "2010": Nine years later indoor season exhibit continues Page6 Page 11 Volume XIV Number 7 Monday, December 3, 1984 Columbia Colleg_e, Chicago Contest: equal opportunites By Tamara Spero people " who can read and say this ran it," Washington pointed out. On the surface, Washington makes sense." One of the reasons for the scattered explained that most people think The Chicago Black Media Coalition, Even though the primary concern of coverage of black community events is situation comedies about black people a full time civil rights organization, will be offering broadcast and print the CBMC is the promotion of the because there are not enough black are cute. "But when they really think about it, when you look at "Gimme a jou'rnalism students internships, an black minority, all media students can people working as editors and managers. -
Why the Electoral College Trumps the Popular Vote for Hillary Clinton
Lady Tigers Win CUNY Volleyball Championship (p.18) The Jacket from Volume XIX. No. 100 November 2016 Dachau (p.10) Why the Electoral College Trumps the White Women Popular Vote for Hillary Clinton Who Voted BY Soham Chakraborty Trump Donald Trump has been elected as of the people. Although the national popular little transportation and communication BY Glyne Harper the 45th President of the United States vote is calculated, it is distorted and often infrastructure connecting them. Large-scale of America. The Republican candidate misrepresented by the Electoral College national political campaigns were simply With Donald Trump’s recent and won the necessary 270 electoral votes. process. not practical or feasible. unexpected election to the presidency, news outlets have been trying to find out how he However, Democrat Hillary Clinton won The United States Electoral One of the concerns was that urban managed to win. Sites like the Boston Globe, the popular vote, receiving 60.1 million College was established in 1787 by the centers with a greater flow of information New York Times, and CNN have pointed to votes to Trump’s 59.8 million. This has now Constitutional Convention as a compromise would give candidates in these regions an the fact that Trump got 53 percent of white occurred five times in our nation’s history, between election of the President by a vote unfair advantage. The founding fathers also women who voted to vote for him. Yet prior most recently in the 2000 election in which in Congress and election by popular vote. believed that much of the population would to the election, a Gallup poll released on Al Gore received the majority of the popular This was a time in which the country was in be uninformed and unqualified to vote April 1 found that seven out of 10 women vote, but was defeated by George W. -
Televisió Pública I Convergència: Continguts Infantils I Juvenils Crossmedia a La CCMA I EITB
Departament de Comunicació Audiovisual i Publicitat Programa de Doctorat en Continguts de Comunicació a l’Era Digital Televisió pública i convergència: Continguts infantils i juvenils crossmedia a la CCMA i EITB. Tesi Doctoral Aina Fernàndez i Aragonès Directora Dra. Rosa Franquet i Calvet Premià de Mar, 2014 2 Als meus fills, la Uxue i l’Ekaitz. Crec que no cal dir res més. 3 4 Agraïments Paradoxalment, crec que no hi ha una obra més col·lectiva que una tesi doctoral. Malgrat que la feina aquí plasmada l’hagi feta jo, aquesta tesi no hagués estat possible sense el suport de moltes persones que m’han fet costat i m’han animat quan em venien ganes de deixar-ho córrer. El meu primer dels agraïments és, sens dubte, pels meus fills. Per la Uxue, per haver- me cedit tantes hores seves per “fer feina” tancada al despatx. I per l’Ekaitz, per haver-me cedit fins i tot part de la meva baixa maternal, quan hauria hagut d’estar amb ell, per poder realitzar el treball de camp. Igualment he d’agraïr molt especialment el suport del Rubén, el meu company, que ha sacrificat les seves aficions per donar-me temps, i dels meus pares, cangurs inestimables durant dies i nits. També mereix un agraïment molt especial la meva directora, la Dra. Rosa Franquet, pels consells i les rectificacions i, sobretot, per animar-me a tirar la tesi endavant en els moments més complicats. Ha estat important el recolzament dels meus amics. En especial de l’Enric (bé, el Dr.