Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
There are a lot of rural communities like rural Kansas where public broadcasting is the only way they have to get local news, weather, high school sports, agricultural updates and so on. Smoky Hills PBS serves 1.2 Kansans over 71 counties. They are going to be gutted, losing half of their budget.
Seems Trump gives even less of a shit about rural "flyover country" than the democrats do.
Well then they should have been more responsible and reported the news such as high school sports and weather and ag reports; and avoided progressive nonsense.
I’m a former NPR listener who was shocked by how biased it had become in recent years. Can you imagine if a public radio had dared report with a conservative lens?
They 100% deserve this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
There are a lot of rural communities like rural Kansas where public broadcasting is the only way they have to get local news, weather, high school sports, agricultural updates and so on. Smoky Hills PBS serves 1.2 Kansans over 71 counties. They are going to be gutted, losing half of their budget.
Seems Trump gives even less of a shit about rural "flyover country" than the democrats do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
There are a lot of rural communities like rural Kansas where public broadcasting is the only way they have to get local news, weather, high school sports, agricultural updates and so on. Smoky Hills PBS serves 1.2 Kansans over 71 counties. They are going to be gutted, losing half of their budget.
Seems Trump gives even less of a shit about rural "flyover country" than the democrats do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
For what it's worth, the CEO of PBS makes about $1,000,000/year. PBS has $500,000,000 in revenue and 1700+ employees.
But the real issue here is that it is the local stations throughout the country that are most likely to fail, not PBS itself.
This is very true. Symbolically the CEO should offer to take a pay cut. Lead by example.
That is a pay cut compared to private sector CEO pay. And don't we constantly have to endure posts from DCUMers whining that they are barely making it on that kind of money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
For what it's worth, the CEO of PBS makes about $1,000,000/year. PBS has $500,000,000 in revenue and 1700+ employees.
But the real issue here is that it is the local stations throughout the country that are most likely to fail, not PBS itself.
This is very true. Symbolically the CEO should offer to take a pay cut. Lead by example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
For what it's worth, the CEO of PBS makes about $1,000,000/year. PBS has $500,000,000 in revenue and 1700+ employees.
But the real issue here is that it is the local stations throughout the country that are most likely to fail, not PBS itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
The CEO of pbs lives in a mansion outside Roundhill.
Long overdue to let them stand on their own
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
NP, no it can’t. PBS stations don’t run advertising and what they air has education value and not commercial value. Many stations can survive via fund raising but in remote areas the money isn’t there.
Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?