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AP reports: "NPR will no longer distribute the member station-produced program 'World of Opera' to about 60 stations across the country because the show host helped organize an ongoing Washington protest, a network official said Friday evening."

National Public Radio headquarters in Washington, DC. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
National Public Radio headquarters in Washington, DC. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)



NPR-Simeone Battle Escalates

By Associated Press

22 October 11

Occupy Wall Street: Take the Bull by the Horns

NPR dumps opera show after host organizes DC protest; NC member station to distribute.

PR will no longer distribute the member station-produced program "World of Opera" to about 60 stations across the country because the show host helped organize an ongoing Washington protest, a network official said Friday evening.

Instead, North Carolina-based classical music station WDAV, which produces the show, said it will distribute the nationally syndicated program on its own beginning Nov. 11. The station said it plans to keep Lisa Simeone as host and has said her involvement in a political protest does not affect her job as a music program host.

NPR spokeswoman Dana Davis Rehm said the network disagrees with the station on the role of program hosts but respects its position.

"Our view is it's a potential conflict of interest for any journalist or any individual who plays a public role on behalf of NPR to take an active part in a political movement or advocacy campaign," she told The Associated Press. "Doing so has the potential to compromise our reputation as an organization that strives to be impartial and unbiased."

Rehm said any host with NPR attached to their title is a public figure representing the network as a whole. But she said "reasonable people can have different views about this." She said the negotiations with WDAV were civil and amicable.

NPR's ethics code states that "NPR journalists may not participate in marches and rallies" involving issues NPR covers. The code notes that some provisions may not apply to outside contributors. It uses a freelancer who primarily contributes arts coverage as an example.

Rehm said the network didn't need to cite the code in its decision to drop the show because its position on hosts' political activities was "even more fundamental."

Simeone, who lives in Baltimore, is a freelancer who has worked in radio and television for 25 years. She has hosted music shows and documentaries. She was fired Wednesday as the host of a radio documentary program, "Soundprint," because she helped organize an anti-war demonstration that also protested Wall Street and what participants call corporate greed.

"Soundprint" is heard on about 35 NPR affiliates and is produced by Maryland-based Soundprint Media Center Inc. Its president said the company had adopted NPR's code of ethics as its own.

"World of Opera" is the only radio show in the nation devoted to broadcasting full-length operas from around the world, according to WDAV.

The Davidson, NC-based station will use the same distribution process as NPR and hopes to retain all the stations that have aired the program, spokeswoman Lisa Gray said. The network is assisting with the change in distribution, and it won't affect the listener's experience.

"We think it's really important to classical music that we continue to produce the show and make it available," Gray told the AP. "That's our primary concern, that we continue to be able to provide this programming to listeners and stations across the country."

WDAV had previously said it has a different mission than NPR and seeks to provide arts and cultural programming nationally and internationally, rather than news.

NPR had previously produced and distributed "World of Opera" in-house until January 2010 when production was shifted to WDAV. The show has been in production for more than 20 years. It has featured performances from US opera companies including Washington National Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Glimmerglass and New York City Opera, as well as operas from Paris, Vienna and elsewhere.

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+14 # Buddha 2014-06-10 09:50
Well, I guess this may be the only way to get Bud-swilling red-necks to care about Global Warming, suggest it threatens their beer supply. If you can somehow show that Climate Change may lead to someone taking their gun away too, overnight there would be solar and wind farms across the South and Central fly-over states...
 
 
-9 # lnason@umassd.edu 2014-06-10 11:07
Actually, this article makes no sense at all. Every global climate model predicts that there will be more rainfall as temperatures increase. Different models do predict increasing drought in (often different) regions but, overall, there is no disagreement: we will have more precipitation, not less.

If a brewery happens to be located in an area with drought, it should not be too difficult to relocate it to an area with more plentiful water resources.

And ditto for agricultural crops like barley and hops. They might also have to be moved a couple hundred miles north. Not much of a problem considering how much of Canada and Siberia are currently too cold to grow usable crops.

Lee Nason
New Bedford, Massachusetts
 
 
+5 # bmiluski 2014-06-10 14:27
"If a brewery happens to be located in an area with drought, it should not be too difficult to relocate it to an area with more plentiful water resources."
--------------------
Really, and where would you move the crops that are already there?
 
 
+2 # ericlipps 2014-06-10 18:11
Actually, the models tend to predict more rain for places which don't get much now, coupled with TOO MUCH rain for many agricultural areas--while other agricultural regions will dry up.

And the "relocation" you so casually propose would have to include not just the breweries but the farms and farming communities which produce the crops needed for the beer )not to mention for food). It's one thing to relocate an industrial facility; it's quite another for farming families by the thousands, tens of thousands or more to pick up and move, especially when new land with decent soil that other people aren't using may be at a premium.
 
 
+3 # davincis_roommate 2014-06-10 12:54
Solution to the water problem: Locate the breweries in the center of the farmland growing the crops. Filter processing water through a created "Bio swell wetland", next store filtered grey water for agricultural use. Use grey water to irrigate the regional farms. Use as needed.
Closing the door to waste and opening the door to Mother Natures cycles is what all responsible industry should be looking at. It is called "Bio mimicry".
Bambi Ruebe
Environmental Design and Medical Botany Research
Ventura, California
 
 
+3 # davincis_roommate 2014-06-10 13:02
The methane extraction is also a good first step to power the pumps for the "Bio mimicry" solution if solar panels are not used. I would use solar to further reduce CO2.
 
 
+5 # Buddha 2014-06-10 16:51
I have an idea, let's move that brewery so it is near the crops, but can tap the Ogalala Aquifer that we are going to send TransCanada's tar sands over, what could go wrong there? Drink up.
 

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