Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does the federal government have to pay for tv programming? If people like it they can donate. Unreal.
Is this a serious question?
Research the history of TV. It hasn't always been fiber optics and satellite and 57 channels with nothing on.
The air waves are a public good. Ensuring they were used that way (education, news) in the beginning was the perogative of government. I'd argue that government funding now more than ever is needed to counterbalance the utter crap that is broadcast. If I have to tolerate Jersey Shore on the public spectrum, by golly the government can underwrite Sesame Street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP who didn't read everything.
Many years ago there was a news story about why PBS was receiving government subsidies (I wish I could find it). They make more than enough to stay on the air, so why give them tax dollars they don't need? It's the same as subsidizing a healthy business.
You are DEAD. WRONG. In many smaller (read: rural) markets, the local PBS station is a critical source of news and quality kids programming for people who either don't have cable or can't afford it. And they absolutely cannot exist without government subsidies. And, for people who actually work in this realm and understand it (as in, not you), the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is one of the most efficient and effective public-private partnerships ever, and one that most Americans cherish. Independent non-partisan studies have found that hte majority of Americans don't want cuts to PBS (which is a miniscule portion of the federal budget anyway). Learn something about an issue before you post ignorant uninformed tripe, okay?
http://valuepbs.org/