The Race to Rescue PBS and NPR Stations

20 JumpCrisscross 7 8/19/2025, 3:48:42 PM nytimes.com ↗

Comments (7)

piperswe · 4h ago
vlucas · 2h ago
It has been extremely evident over the past several years that the news coverage and other content from NPR is far from politically neutral. If they can't maintain neutrality, they should not get public funding. I don't see how this is controversial. If they were producing a bunch of right-wing or right-coded content, the author of this article would be rejoicing about it. If their content is valuable to their audience, it should be able to stand on its own. The only thing I am a little bit sad about here is PBS and some of their educational content for kids. Some of that stuff was top-notch. Hopefully this can find some way to also stand on its own.
Mr_Eri_Atlov · 6m ago
If y'all view NPR as biased, I'm afraid there's very little hope for you.

You'd be better served watching RT news, truly unbiased and glorious like its unfallible motherland.

nunez · 5m ago
NPR and PBS are not the only beneficieries from CPB funding. In fact, CPB funding only accounts for about 1% of NPR's revenue. NPR is definitely biased but will be fine.

Who won't be fine, however, are the thousands of radio and public TV stations across the political spectrum for whom CPB funding makes up a substantial portion of their funding.

Every dollar counts for these stations, and seeing our administration decide that public media should die (or, more likely, get swallowed up even more aggressively by Clear Channel/Sinclair) because they're too "woke" is a real shame.

Also, CPB was the sole grantor of the NextGen Warning System program, which is ending once CPB shuts down.

dyauspitr · 4h ago
Perfect opportunity for a crowdfunding effort to get us through a year until the midterms. If the Dems can’t take back the house in the midterms then it’s game over but for now this is the perfect opportunity for private funding to keep PBS and NPR afloat for the short term.
everdrive · 4h ago
>If the Dems can’t take back the house in the midterms then it’s game over but for now

And if they do, what happens in the next 2-4 years if they lose power again? I'm not really weighing in on the specific political issues here, but wondering what we do about extreme pendulum swings every few years as the government changes parties.

dizlexic · 3h ago
break the two party strangle hold that only has to appeal to the extremes to win. (this is a both sides argument)