Posts Tagged NewsHour

Hunger in America – NewsHour Reports

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This is going to be a huge issue

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Good News on the Benefits Front

good-news-on-the-benefits-front

The $24 billion economic package, which would also broaden tax breaks for businesses, cleared the House Thursday afternoon in a 403-12 vote and heads to President Barack Obama to sign into law. It passed 98-0 late Wednesday in the Senate.

Under the measure, the $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers would be lengthened by seven months and expanded with a $6,500 credit for some prospective homebuyers who already own homes.

The nearly 2 million people who have lost or are in danger of running through their unemployment benefits before the end of 2009 would receive up to 20 weeks in additional benefits.

For those in states with unemployment rates above 8.5 percent, it would grant an additional six weeks on top of that. The extension is the fourth since last June, and could give some people up to 99 weeks of unemployment benefits, above the previous record of 65 weeks set in the 1970s, according to the Associated Press.

More after the jump – Source The NewsHour

Read the rest of this entry »

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News Hour Looks at the Foreclosure Program

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The bottom line for me as I watched this segment is this: A person on their own is unlikely to get through the bureaucracy. What we are doing is essential!

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Building the new web support system

We had a webinar on the 28th July where 4 guests showed how we can use our FTMC sites to become a centre-piece of support for both the mission and also a locus of information and engagement for our “audience”. Here are the highlights:

I. Todd Mundt (The Mediavore, Louisville Public Media)

  • It is often necessary to define the scope of your site more narrowly and to tighten the content you include in it. This should be done with your audience and its feedback in mind.
  • There are two major components to The Mediavore:

-The site seeks to connect the stories people have heard (from national public media sources, for instance) with stories and content they have not yet heard. This additional content is meant to be interesting/entertaining and to augment what readers have already heard and seen.

-The Mediavore seeks to express this in a way that makes the site interesting.

  • Your site should have a distinctive “voice”. Experiment with this to get a feel for what feels right. This voice should align with what you want to accomplish and what your audience responds best to.

II. Laura Conaway (Planet Money)

  • Twitter has been an invaluable tool in the success of the Planet Money website.
    • Twitter allows the site to be more interactive and enables discussion.
    • Planet Money often calls for certain things (photos, stories, etc.) from its audience using Twitter.
    • The audience can see the results of their efforts, which builds a stronger following.
    • Sometimes, a simple tweet can expand to a blog post, to a podcast, and finally to an appearance on Morning Edition. (Mandy the Clown)
  • The best way to build an audience is to be constantly talking to that audience.

III. Carolyn O’Hara (The Online NewsHour)

  • The goal of the Making Sen$e website: To create a place where NewsHour viewers, students, and educators could go to make sense of the economic world.
    • The site has gone through three editions, and is targeted towards 1) The layperson seeking to better understand the economy, 2) Educators looking for classroom tools, 2) Students seeking to augment their knowledge of the economy.
    • The materials created by the Making Sen$e team, as well as the content aggregated on the site, is meant to have a long “shelf life”. It is material that is relevant and can be referenced again and again.
  • Paul Solman’s economics blog is the 2nd most trafficked NewsHour site.
    • Essentially, viewers write questions to Paul and he answers them (about 2 per day).
    • There has also been some experimentation with the blog (ex: guest bloggers).
  • The Patchwork Nation project could be an important tool for Facing the Mortgage Crisis websites. You can use the data compiled by the project as a jumping off point (ex: how do we compare to other similar locations?).

IV. Bobbi English (Sesame Workshop)

  • The primetime special “Families Stand Together: Feeling Secure in Tough Times” will air September 9, 2009.
  • Project goals:
    • To protect children’s wellbeing and emotional development
    • To foster hope for kids and families experiencing the mortgage crisis first-hand.
    • To raise national awareness of these families.
    • To model behavior—How to react to questions, explain what your family is experiencing, etc.
    • To help communities better understand families who are going through foreclosure.
  • Community screenings will be an important way to bring your community together and to reach out to families in your area.
    • In addition, Sesame Workshop is also releasing promos, interstitials, My Source promos, tips for families, and other tools.
  • 200,000 free outreach kits will be available for Facing the Mortgage Crisis stations (about 500 per station).

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Our opportunity to offer the best News in the World

The NewsHour goes from strength to strength. Have you noticed that it can and does “Get” anyone they want now. For those who have something to say – in this case Mr Bernanke, know that they will get a real hearing. When I think of all the news resources in public media – TV and Radio – if you put it together – we have an incomparable system.

The trouble is that with “Appointment Radio/TV” you can’t put it all together. In the past if you missed the News Hour, or Bill Moyers, or Charlie Rose, or ATC or ME – you missed it. In the last 2 years, you could go to many of the web sites for the show and get a stream. Front Line was one of the first to offer this. BUT YOU COULD NOT FIND IT ALL IN ONE PLACE.

By the late fall of 2009, you will be able to find it all in one place – but it is up to us at the local stations to offer this place.

I call to you to consider using the space that you have created for the FTMC project to experiment.

How hard would it be to aggregate the best of the financial news on this site?

I see a site where we offer:

How hard would this be? What would be the payoff?

Bueller? – Bueller?

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Patchwork Nation: “Foreclosures taking an emotional toll”

Recently NewsHour‘s Patchwork Nation blogged about the staggering foreclosure numbers, and the fact that among the 12 different community types they’ve identified (for more information, check out Patchwork Nation’s website), foreclosure was the common problem in all of them.

Take a look at the full post–Anna Shoup interviewed people in Ann Arbor and St. Louis–and also check out Patchwork Nation’s site.

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ThinkTV’s List of Great Content

NewsHour
The Mortgage Meltdown
Foreclosures in Wealthier Monied ‘Burbs May Signal Trouble Ahead
Mortgage Fraud Sweep Nets Hundreds of Arrests
What causes Mortgage Rates to Rise and Fall?
Foreclosures more than Double: Uptick seen in Durable Goods
Fed tries to ease Impact of Mortgage Crisis on U.S. Economy
Why didn’t the Private Mortgage Insurance advert the Current Banking and Credit Crisis?
Financial Worries, Credit Crisis felt Around the Globe
Patchwork Nation

Nightly Business Report
A Tale of Five Cities: PBS’ Nightly Business Report Talks to Homeowners about the Mortgage Crisis

NPR
Foreclosures Up as Unemployment Soars

NOW
Coping with the Mortgage Mess
Mortgage Mess
Will Washington Fix the Mortgage Mess?
Housing Crisis: You Asked, She Answered
Help for the Homeowners
Expert Advice on Controlling Debt

Pawn Chronicles
Living on the Fringe

This American Life
The Giant Pool of Money

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NewsHour’s Making Sen$e: Your Guide to the Economy

During this time of economic crisis, public media is able to provide trusted information to the nation. 76 public TV and radio stations are doing this locally in 32 markets, and nationally programs like NewsHour are reporting on economic matters as well.

Check out NewsHour’s Making Sen$e–a guide to the economy that features videos, interactive games, and explanations of different economic aspects.  This is another great example of what public media is doing to face the mortgage, and the broader financial, crisis.

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Generation Next: Tough Choices

When the economy is struggling and people who already had jobs are losing them, is there a place for new people—graduates—to enter into the job market?

 

PBS’s NewsHour and NPR have begun a series called “Generation Next: Tough Choices.”  What are young people, who largely grew up in a time of economic prosperity, doing to face the financial crisis?  You can check out the series here.

 

If you’ve just graduated or have entered the job market for the first time, tell us your story–what’s your strategy?  What tips do you have for others in your situation? 

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What is help when your home can’t be saved? – Hope!

Much of what your public radio or TV station can do in the mortgage crisis is to connect you to people who have the knowledge to help you keep your home.

But in some cases this will not be possible. We can connect you to help but your home may not be savable.

Some cities in America are in a new phase of the Mortgage Crisis – Las Vegas, Cleveland, Detroit – cities in California and Florida – where it may not be possible to save almost any home where foreclosure proceedings have begun.

In these cases, the issue is now how to help you when you may have lost your home and your job. How to help you when you have lost the foundation of your life. What kind of help can that be?

One answer is to give you hope.

What does that mean? It means helping you find out, in a realistic and tangible way how to rebuild your life.

I will talk more about this over the next few months. But right now I wanted to tell you about one of the things that is happening in Las Vegas – one of the worst hit cities.

One of the worst things that can happen to any of us is to have nothing meaningful to do.

Jobs are vital. Without one how do we pay the bills. Our work is central to giving us meaning. When we meet a person for the first time, we ask them “What do you do?” Our work defines us. So when we lose our job, who are we? Many people are losing their jobs. This is why many are losing their homes as well.

But in reality, many jobs are in themselves boring and meaningless.  Many wish we could do something that we could get excited about. Some are finding that losing their job has strangely brought them back to life.

Here is a link to a NewsHour piece on how many are finding that not having their boring job has empowered people to get behind their passion.

Many can cope with losing their home so long as they can find shelter. But not having work is a kind of death.

We need to be able to get up in the morning and have some thing and some people to go to. If we have good work and we are with good people, we can also rebuild our networks. With a good network, we can also have a much better chance of getting paid work.

If this cannot be your old job, then many are finding that volunteering is a good first step. But of course the issue then is how do I find a good volunteer job?

What KNPR and many organizations in Las Vegas have done is to make it easy for people to volunteer to help organizations that are helping people in the community.

volunteerathon

During National Volunteer Week, April 19-25, Nevada Public Radio partnered with the Volunteer Center of Southern Nevada to hold it’s first-ever Volunteer-A-Thon. April is the time when Nevada Public Radio holds its annual spring membership campaign. Instead of asking for members we asked listeners to give something perhaps more valuable – their time. The Volunteer-A-Thon culminated with an on-air drive for volunteers that was also an opportunity to recognize corporate partners who champion volunteerism and support employee volunteers.

Southern Nevadans answered the call to service during the Volunteer-A-Thon, with more than 460 people pledging more than 11,655 volunteer hours to local nonprofit organizations. During the Volunteer-A-Thon, 32 new nonprofit organizations also signed up with the Volunteer Center of Southern Nevada.

So instead of asking for money for the station – KNPR pushed its pledge week out a month – they asked for people to help each other and made it easy to choose what they wanted to do. The 11,000 hours are equivalent to over $200,000 worth of time.

KNPR did not do this on its own – but was helped in turn by not only the Volunteer Centre of Southern Nevada but by a number of corporations such as Zappos, Southwest Gas, Wells Fargo, & Harrahs.

Many good things are coming out of this action. Most important, the splintered community of Las Vegas is coming together. The volunteer organizations, themselves short of money, are getting help and are knitting as a group. For Profit organizations, are joining in. Most importantly, when all might seem lost, rather than not taking action, people are getting out, being with others and doing important work.

Maybe in the scheme of things, this is small right now. But maybe also it might be the beginning of some thing big. We see signs of this in other hard hit cities such as Detroit and Cleveland. You can get so far down that the only way out is up. The only people you can rely on is each other. This is the magic moment when the word “Community” starts to come to life.

“The Sleeper Awakes!”

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