Story Archives of 'Media'

For The Love of Movies

By Virginia Prescott on Thursday, November 19, 2009.

Film critics are in trouble. The century-old profession grew up alongside cinema, and the thoughtful reviews and theoretical writings from high-profile critics shaped how we understand the movies. But as journalism struggles financially and more reviewers are getting laid off or fired, critics wonder what’s to come of their profession.

That’s where film critic Gerald Peary stepped in. He’s been writing about film for over 25 years, and has been a weekly columnist and reviewer for The Boston Phoenix since 1996. He’s now stepped behind the camera for the first time to direct a film about his colleagues.

It’s called For The Love of Movies, and it looks at the past, present, and future of film criticism. It screens tonight at The Music Hall in Portsmouth. We're joined by the film’s producer, Amy Geller, and writer and director Gerald Peary.

Boston Phoenix: Gerald Peary: No Respect?

Los Angeles Times: Roger Ebert: Back to the future of film criticism

Huffington Post: David Sterritt: Do Film Critics Have a Future? Who Cares?

Life In Hell: How To Be a Clever Film Critic

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The Celebrity Media Bubble

By Avishay Artsy on Wednesday, November 18, 2009.

President Obama posed for the cameras today atop the Great Wall of China, a major sightseeing stop during his diplomatic tour of Asia. Photographers captured the president walking down the last ramp by himself, a shot carefully planned by White House aides.

More Ways the Web Has Changed Us

By Brady Carlson on Wednesday, November 18, 2009.

NHPR webmaster Brady Carlson put together his own list of ways the web has changed us:

1) Broadband and wireless as game-changers.
There is no YouTube revolution if we’re all on dialup. Cell phones become portable computers instead of mere communication devices. It also creates a cultural expectation that we have access wherever we go. Realtors have told me through Public Insight, for example, that homebuyers ask about internet access when they’re looking at a house, the way they’d ask about the water system or the electrical.

And Now We Hear From You

By Avishay Artsy on Monday, November 16, 2009.

Our segment on those old cassette mixtapes from ex’s that we just can’t let go of got a response from a listener named A. Rioux, who wrote:

Is NBC Too Big to Fail?

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, November 16, 2009.

Think back to the pre-cable days when three networks: ABC, CBS, and NBC ruled the air warves. NBC is the oldest – founded in 1926 by the Radio Corporation of America, back when television was a mere twinkle in Philo Farnsworth’s eye.

Since then NBC has been home to hits like The Cosby Show, Friends, The Olympics, and the first Academy Awards Show. The network invited viewers to “Come Home to NBC,” where everybody knows your name. The peacock’s feathers have faded in the ratings in recent years, and audience share plummeted when Jay Leno moved to the 10pm slot this Fall.

Now media giant Comcast plans to swoop in and buy NBC universal, a move that could signal the beginning of the end for network TV. Joining us with more is Mark Harris, who wrote about the beleaguered network for New York magazine.

New York Magazine: Is Broadcast TV Too Big to Fail?

The Associated Press: Broadcast Pioneer NBC Prepares for Cable Takeover

Backstage: Is Broadcast TV Too Big to Fail?

(Photo by Jezlyn26 via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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The Future of New Hampshire's Newspapers

By Laura Knoy on Friday, November 13, 2009.

Yesterday ten editors and publishers from Granite State papers met to discuss the challenges of keeping newspapers competitive and profitable in the age of web and social media. We'll talk with some of the panelists about what they learned and what the newspaper of tomorrow might look like.

Guests

  • Mark Guerringue, publisher of the Daily Sun newspapers in Portland, Conway, Laconia and Berlin
  • Terry Williams, publisher of the Telegraph of Nashua
  • Susan Hertz, director of the University of New Hampshire's journalism program

We'll also hear from

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Sesame Street Turns Forty

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

1969 was a big year for television. Families gathered around their sets to watch the first man walk on the moon. Reports from Vietnam launched a new age of journalism. And American children met a whole new gang of friends.

Sesame Street kicks off its 40th season today. The show certainly has changed over the decades – but those changes aren’t just on-screen. The media landscape surrounding the show is significantly different now than it was in 1969.

Sesame Workshop president and CEO Gary Knell joins us to explain how the show has survived increased competition, changing ideas about child development, and the growing demand for portable media.

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How We Got to Sesame Street

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

When I was a kid, TV was for adults. I remember the variety shows like Laugh-In! and watching Dean Martin with a martini glass in hand. Even if I didn’t get the jokes, I ached to stay up late with my big brothers and sisters just to gather round the tube. Kids TV offered little. Uncle Gus seemed mildly bored, Captain Kangeroo was kinda creepy, and tromping around in circles on romper room never grabbed me. Then came Sesame Street.

Sesame Street opened up a universe apart from my home in Concord, NH. Here was a gritty city landscape with stoops and garbage cans. Because of Sesame Street, we grew up with people and creatures who didn’t look like us. Susan and Bob, Bert and Ernie, Oscar the Grouch and Kermit the Frog. Black people! People who spoke Spanish! Over the past decade, other countries have picked up on this appreciation for diversity and planted Sesame Streets on their own soil.

Sesame Street is a place of animation and color and fantasy and play where you could be anything, as long as you learned the value of co-op-er-a-tion and shared your toys. Learning is fun. Reading is an achievement. My mother only allowed us to watch one half-hour of TV after school. Then Sesame Street came along and we got an hour-long pass. I grew up in a world of great achievement and great fear. A world reeling from political assassinations. My mother fearing that my brothers would be drafted to Vietnam. Sesame Sesame Street was a refuge in the afternoon from the evening news, Watergate, and urban riots.

I bowed out when Snuffalupagus was still a secret and Elmo hadn't yet appeared. Now Cookie Monster eats fruit I am told. The set looks more Park Slope than Lower East Side, both places I ended up living as an adult. I hear the songs and remember it all. So do our listeners. Eric Palson raised his kids on Sesame Street. He wrote in to say what a positive effect it had on his family:

“It was always something we could share and discuss with our kids because we both enjoyed it. It was clever and accessible for our young guys without talking down to any of us. Sesame Street was also an avenue to introduce new topics that might not have come up. I remember Bert and Ernie. Bert was the quintessential nerd and Ernie the free-spirit. They were perfect reflections of our two sons, who naturally took up their respective sides in the situation at hand. This was often the framework for our earliest ethics debates.”

Sesame Street isn't just for kids. Famous big-kids like Julia Roberts, Ben Stiller, and this week, Michelle Obama stopped by that iconic brownstone on 123 Sesame Street.

There are shows brought to you by the letter N. Interviews brought to you by the number 9, and friends and neighbors on every corner. Sesame Sesame Street is a place to hang out and explore the world, without leaving the living room.

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Tim Crouch's Vision of England

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.

British playwright and performer Tim Crouch enjoys challenging our notions of theater. His latest play, England, is transplanted from the typical theater setting into an art gallery. He and actress Hannah Ringham play one character – not identified as male or female - who desperately needs a heart transplant. As the character travels to a foreign country to receive a new heart, the play provokes questions about the commercial value of art, and of human life.

As Time Out magazine wrote in a review of England, "Tim Crouch is... conceptual without being obscure; experimental without losing the plot, or indeed faith in the power of words to move you." Tim Crouch joins us from the studios at Dartmouth College, where he’s performing England tonight and tomorrow at the Hood Museum of Art.

Watch an excerpt from the second act of England, as performed at the Fruitmarket Gallery during the Edinburgh Festival 2007:

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Grading Media Coverage of Health Care

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, November 2, 2009.

In September, former senate majority leader Tom Daschle spoke at The New School in New York City. He described a health care town hall meeting that was nothing like the shrill, hostile meetings then leading the news. “The next morning,” Daschle says, “I read the newspaper and I’d say 95% of the coverage in the paper was about the demonstrators and quotes that they had, either about me, or about health care that were completely off base. Nothing about the thoughtful, substantive discussion that occurred for an hour and a half in that hall.”

The headlines generated by gun-toting protesters, people decrying “socialized medicine” and “death panels” have faded, but the health care debate continues. This week, Democrats and Republicans in the House of Representatives are expected to vote on their versions of the health care reform bill, bills that are quite different from the Senate’s version.

If you find yourself getting lost in the process, you are not alone. Trudy Lieberman has been following health care and the media’s coverage of the issue for the Columbia Journalism Review. She also teaches health and medicine reporting at the City University of New York and joins us to grade the media coverage of the health care debate.

Columbia Journalism Review: Truth Emerges about the Public Option

L.A. Times: Media needs to deepen coverage of healthcare reform

Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism: Health News Coverage in the U.S. Media

(Photo by Truthout.org via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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