Local Productions .

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January-February 2012 Letter from KCPT’s CEO, Kliff Kuehl

KCPT continues to focus on localism and becoming the "center stage" of our community.

We believe that greater Kansas City is a stronger place when our citizens know about their home town and the things that make it unique—-when we share an understanding of where we’ve been and can come together to respectfully discuss where we are going — to share some pride.  In an era of declining local coverage by newspapers and commercial television and an absence of locally generated Internet content, how should the people of Kansas City gain the understanding they need — to connect with others and contribute to the civic, cultural and economic life of their region.

KCPT has begun to bridge this gap by reinventing our local content services.  The first phase of this process has been to greatly expand the number of local programs and specials that now includes: Imagine KC, Check Please, Generation XL, Weathering the Financial Storm, Meet the Past, Week in Review, Ruckus and The Local Show.  This expansion in local coverage is being made possible by hard work and increasing efficiencies at KCPT—a necessity driven by steep cuts in public and corporate funding and a 60% reduction in staff over a decade ago.

Our city continues to advance — the unveiling of the Kauffman Center, Google’s decision to launch “superband” in our city, the Chamber’s roll out of The Big 5, and the 60-foot “dendroid” that recently took root at the Nelson.  KCPT has been right there, taking our 800,000 weekly viewers inside these and the many other local developments with the thoughtful and constructive approach that only public television provides.

We are engaged in important, content-generating partnerships with an array of civic  groups including: The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, The Kansas City Public Library, The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, The Kansas City Area Development Council, The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, BlueCross/BlueShield of Kansas City, The Greater Kansas City Health Care Foundation and the Mid America Regional Council. The civic leadership sees KCPT as an essential community asset with unique and powerful assets available to serve our community.

We are not resting on our success.  We envision an even richer, “next-generation public television service”  better connecting with people on their terms –  with even more local content produced for and delivered across social media platforms, and supplemented by engaging and informative social media content.  The primary aim of Phase II is to derive greater community value from the quality KPCT content that is now being regularly created.  We will use a variety of strategies to harness new social media tools to connect constituency groups to KCPT content relating to their efforts.  We will also add value to KCPT video content by stimulating user generated content.  These new forms of engagement will enhance KCPT’s value to the community by increasing usage.

The other transformational aim is to provide more constructive content to the region.  This will come in many forms including “town hall” conversations on location about topics that are important to our region.  Some examples include a regional arts strategy, the future of urban education, and the role of philanthropy in our community.  KCPT’s new mobile studio is already being pushed into service for these duties but the station needs to add resources to staff it and to fund ongoing technical upgrades.

At this juncture, the KCPT leadership team is in the final stages of framing this phase II vision and detailing out the resources that will be required to achieve it.   As we move toward the implementation stage in our planning, the team is first consulting with a small group of dedicated supporters for their input on the plan.  We intend to have an updated and detailed plan in place by early December.

More will come as our plans turn into action.  KCPT is excited about becoming the “center stage” of our community.

Warm regards,

Kliff Kuehl signature

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Jazz Appreciation: Tommy Ruskin & Julie Turner

April is Jazz Appreciation Month and we celebrate in the studio with top Kansas City jazz drummer Tommy Ruskin and his wife, Julie Turner.

These days the calendar tells us many things to celebrate and one of them is underway right now. April is Jazz Appreciation Month. The National Endowment for the Humanities declared it so 12 years ago.

You may not have realized it, but Mike Shanin probably did. Though you know him best as the host of Ruckus and a long-time radio talker, Mike’s also a real fan of the music that Kansas City once hung its hat on. Among his favorites here in town is a man whose impeccable sense of timing and texture has made him a staple of the jazz scene. Tommy Ruskin brought his drums to the studio and set them up for us, as he and his wife, Julie Turner, joined Mike to talk and play some music here on The Local Show.

You can celebrate Jazz Appreciation Month at the American Jazz Museum at 18th and Vine.

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Joel Harper’s Firming after 50

Celebrity personal trainer Joel Harper teamed up with Dr. Michael Roizen to create this workout geared for viewers 50+.

All fitness levels welcome. Includes stretches and exercises that help tone, stretch your entire body and leave you feeling energized.

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The Junior League of Kansas City’s Healthy U Initiative

Learn more about this new youth obesity prevention program.

The Junior League of Kansas City, Missouri has adopted University Academy for its “Healthy U” program, which offers programs for parents and children on cooking, fitness, and family healthy food education, as well as the BackSnack program, which provides healthy snacks for students.

Learn more about the Harvesters Back Snack program.

Read more about the program at The Local Show web site.

With funding from:

BlueCross BlueShield of Kansas City An Independent Licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield AssociationJunior League of Kansas City, Missouri Women building better communities

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The Kansas City Spirit: Bruce Mathews and Mamie Hughes

Nick Haines welcomes Bruce Mathews and Mamie Hughes to The Local Show to discuss the new book, Kansas City Spirit: Stories of Service Above Self.

We celebrate Kansas Citians who are willing to put service above self. We delve into the hearts and souls of local notables who have put the community above their own selfish interests in order to make this city a better place to live. They are chronicled in a new book called the Kansas City Spirit: Stories of Service Above Self.

Image of book cover reading The Kansas City Spirit: Stories of Service Above Self

The added bonus when you purchase the book is that a portion of the proceeds, in keeping with The Kansas City Spirit, will go to benefit local charities: Operation Breakthrough, Elmwood Cemetery, The Kansas City Museum – Minority Heritage Project, the Community Cadet Corps and Gillis.

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Kansas City Week in Review

Outgoing KCMO Mayor Mark Funkhouser joins host Nick Haines. As he prepares to leave office, Funkhouser discusses the joys and disappointments of leading the city and discloses his future plans...


THIS WEEK: Friday April 22nd 2011 @ 7:30 pm
(Rebroadcast Sunday @ 11 am)

NEWSMAKER GUEST: Mayor Mark Funkhouser

He’s packing up the boxes! With one week left to go, outgoing KCMO Mayor Mark Funkhouser joins host Nick Haines as he dissects the joys and disappointments of leading the metro’s largest city. On May 1st, Funkhouser will hand over the title of mayor to Sly James. What will he do next?

PLUS… we pick apart the rest of the week’s local and regional news stories with NBC Action News political reporter Chris Hernandez and the Star’s Chief politcal correspondent Steve Kraske, the host of Up to Date on KCUR-FM.

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Kansas City Week in Review

Nick Haines hosts the conversation with journalists, politicians and others on the issues and news that affects the metro area and it's citizens.

Kansas City Week in Review is your local source and connection to the newmakers and newsanalysts in our community.



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Kansas City Week in Review for April 1, 2011

KC MO Earning Tax Debate & KCK Mayor Joe Reardon

You’ve seen the campaign ads for and against the earnings tax. Now its decision time. We debate the e-tax with a supporter and opponent on this week’s show.

Dianne Cleaver
YES on E-TAX
Co-Chair, Save Kansas City Campaign

Woody Cozad
NO on E-TAX
Spokesman, Kansas City Tax Reform

KCK WINS GOOGLE LOTTERY: Kansas City Kansas is about to undergo a technological transformation that has cities from coast to coast green with envy. Google announces this week that its picked KCK over more than a thousand cities across America to be the site for a colossal new internet experiment that will connect schools, homes and businesses to the world-wide-web at speeds 100 times faster than available today. Mayor Joe Reardon joins KCWIR to explain what it all means….

Mayor Joe Reardon
Unified Govt. KCK/Wyandotte

Find out more about the Google project

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Kansas City Week in Review for April 8, 2011

Kansas City Mayor-elect Sly James and a fast paced, high energy review of a slew of metro  development projects.

THIS WEEK: Friday, April 8, 2011 @ 7:30 pm
(Rebroadcast Sunday @ 11 am)

A LANDSLIDE VICTORY FOR THE EARNINGS TAX. WE’RE JOINED BY KCMO MAYOR-ELECT, SLY JAMES…

Sly James
KCMO Mayor-Elect

FROM EPA TO BASSPRO, DINOSAURS TO SHARKS….

A week after Kansas City, KS wins the Google lottery, there’s dire news in Wyandotte County KCK as the EPA announces its heading out of downtown KCK and taking its 600 jobs to the greener pastures of Lenexa. Could the Polsinelli law firm be heading to Johnson County too? The firm abruptly shelves plans to build a contentious office tower on the Country Club Plaza. So what’s next? A fast paced high energy review of a slew of metro development projects from bailouts at BassPro in Independence, to dinosaurs and aquariums in Johnson County.

Krista Klaus
The Business Journal

Kevin Collison
Kansas City Star

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Kansas City’s History Detective: Candice Millard

Destiny of the Republic, which tells the tale of the madness and murder of President James Garfield, started the year in the number 15 spot on the New York Times nonfiction list. Randy Mason caught up with Candice Millard.

Kansas City authors with a national reach are just the kind of thing that we love to showcase on The Local Show. This week, meet Candice Millard, a Leawood based author whose new book about the life and death of one America’s least known Presidents has remarkably propelled her to the New York Times bestseller list. Destiny of the Republic, which tells the tale of the madness and murder of President James Garfield, started the year in the number 15 spot on the New York Times nonfiction list.

Candice Millard is a former writer and editor for National Geographic magazine. Her first book, The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey, was a New York Times bestseller and was named one of the best books of the year by, among others, the New York Times, Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Christian Science Monitor, and Kansas City Star. The River of Doubt was a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection and a Book Sense Pick, was a finalist for the Quill Awards, and won the William Rockhill Nelson Award. It has been printed in Portugese, Mandarin, and Korean, as well as a British edition. Millard’s work has also appeared in Time Magazine, Washington Post Book World, and the New York Times Book Review. Millard’s second book, The Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine & the Murder of a President, rose to number five on The New York Times bestseller list and has been named a best book of the year by, among others, The New York Times, Washington Post, Kirkus Reviews, The Kansas City Star, Amazon, and Barnes & Noble. Millard lives in Kansas City with her husband and three children.

Here is a brief look at Destiny of the Republic:

Who’s the metro area author making this big splash? Randy Mason caught up with her.

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