Programs/Content
It’s time for public radio to fix problems in its foundation
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Like homeowners who delayed plumbing repairs to their mid-century modern house, public radio needs to act now to renovate its broadcast-centered revenue model.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/perry-simon/page/7/)
Like homeowners who delayed plumbing repairs to their mid-century modern house, public radio needs to act now to renovate its broadcast-centered revenue model.
Two of the stations serve Indigenous audiences.
The restructuring included layoffs and cuts to local programming.
The change separates music and news on WPR’s 38 stations.
The commission is evaluating allegations that programs promoting nutritional supplements and other products violate its standards for noncommercial broadcasting.
Today’s higher education leaders face unprecedented financial pressures. What is your station doing to help them solve their problems?
The CPM model of advertising does not — and will not ever — work to sustain podcasting.
“We are reaching a really big audience,” says Abby Jenkins of PBS Kids. “They are born gamers.”
SIG will rebrand itself to Media Management as part of the purchase.
As a mirror on tech and society, the “spring break for nerds” offers takeaways relevant to the future of public media.
A $5 million grant from the Mellon Foundation supports HBCU stations in preserving historical recordings in their archives.
The job cuts affected staff working in children’s media, local news and the Interactive Engagement Group, among other units.