System/Policy
Why public media’s past might be its future
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To succeed in the world of on-demand media choices, public media organizations need to return their focus to creating original local content.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/aria-velasquez/page/188/)
To succeed in the world of on-demand media choices, public media organizations need to return their focus to creating original local content.
An audit into Arkansas PBS’ “procurements and related processes” continued to raise concerns from state lawmakers about the educational television network’s business practices at a Friday meeting.
The conservative director’s film about Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is airing Monday on PBS.
More than a dozen stations requested assistance in the project’s first two weeks.
With equipment you probably have at home already, you can create a program even during the pandemic.
Journalists revisited sources from the show’s second season to examine the pandemic’s effects on Mississippi.
About two dozen staffers have agreed to separate from the organization or take furloughs.
As schools cancel high-school proms due to COVID-19 concerns, two public radio stations held online events to meet the need.
A spike in audience for “NewsHour” came from viewers tuning in more frequently.
WGBH’s decision to sell its interest in PMM is part of a pattern in which the Boston-based public media giant has incubated business ventures and spun them off.
Current has joined forces with Greater Public, Public Media Journalists Association, Public Radio Program Directors and Local that Works founder Mark Fuerst on “Building Resilience,” a new webinar series.