Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
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.
As has been pointed out many times, reality has a liberal bias. Sorry about your feelings.
I imagine that a liberal's brain is full of 20 slogans that appear in their minds when agitated, like a Magic 8 Ball. "Every accusation is a confession/projection!" "History will judge you!" "Reality has a liberal bias!"
It's like there's a hamster in a wheel powering their brains, searching for the right slogan or accusation to throw out. Pathetic.
I’m sorry, can you show me on doll where the educated people hurt your feelings, snowflake?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
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.
They do their best. How would you go about being "neutral" when one side consists of typical politicians while the other side lies, then claims any fact checking is biased?
I’ve Been at NPR for 25 Years. Here’s How We Lost America’s Trust.
Uri Berliner, a veteran at the public radio institution, says the network lost its way when it started telling listeners how to think.
https://www.thefp.com/p/npr-editor-how-npr-lost-americas-trust
Their best isn't good enough. Even former employees are down on them.
Even current and former Fox News employees are not supporting their current pro-dictator fake news agenda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
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.
As has been pointed out many times, reality has a liberal bias. Sorry about your feelings.
I imagine that a liberal's brain is full of 20 slogans that appear in their minds when agitated, like a Magic 8 Ball. "Every accusation is a confession/projection!" "History will judge you!" "Reality has a liberal bias!"
It's like there's a hamster in a wheel powering their brains, searching for the right slogan or accusation to throw out. Pathetic.
I’m sorry, can you show me on doll where the educated people hurt your feelings, snowflake?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
Ask the mooch states which depends on tax from blue states.
Anonymous wrote: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
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.
They do their best. How would you go about being "neutral" when one side consists of typical politicians while the other side lies, then claims any fact checking is biased?
I’ve Been at NPR for 25 Years. Here’s How We Lost America’s Trust.
Uri Berliner, a veteran at the public radio institution, says the network lost its way when it started telling listeners how to think.
https://www.thefp.com/p/npr-editor-how-npr-lost-americas-trust
Their best isn't good enough. Even former employees are down on them.
Anonymous wrote:This is intolerable! Without NPR & PBS, people will have only ABC, CNN, NBC, CBS, MSNBC, & hundreds of radio stations, magazines, & newspapers from which to get their fake news.
Plus, where are people going to get tote bags that proclaim their moral superiority without NPR & PBS??
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:If it's that good, it can stand on its own, right?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve tried listening to other radio and tv news, but it’s so dumbed down. Maybe npr and pbs are too hard for the undereducated to understand, so they claim it’s biased. ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NPR is absurdly biased politically.
It never should have received public funding. Trump is merely correcting a longstanding wrong.
Help me understand this sentiment. Their news is not overwhelmingly biased. They have an in depth conversation about the news, interviewing people, and opinions on solutions are given toward the end. NPR is statist, as in they believe the state can solve many problems, but the opinion is not crammed down your throat like it is with cable news.
It’s so bizarre to me that people can’t understand these important differences.
Anonymous wrote:NPR is absurdly biased politically.
It never should have received public funding. Trump is merely correcting a longstanding wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t they just sell commercial spots and survive in the marketplace like regular TV and radio?
With all the fundraising begging they do every hour as it is, I might as well be hearing commercials anyway.
Seriously though - if they can’t exist on their own, that’s an indication that they shouldn’t exist at all.
The idea is that they can be free to report what they want and it doesn't matter if Bob's Big House of Furniture likes it or not. And, there's an idea that it's for the public good, and we can/should have media that is not purely about what Bob's Big House of Furniture is will to pay for.
But they ARE NOT “free to report” what they want. Because if they made a trend of reporting anything that their overwhelmingly leftist listeners disagreed with, they’d get mad and they’d stop buying their Nina Toten-bags and doing monthly donations.
So NPR is just as beholden to market forces with regards to story selection as Fox News is.
Why can’t you just admit that?
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.