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Many of those stations are in rural Republican areas and receive money from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. NPR's Frank Langfitt drove out to visit one in the mountains of West Virginia.
Congress voted to claw back federal funding to public media. Some of those hit hardest include community radio stations in areas that voted for the president.
The Senate recently passed a bill that would decimate public media, clawing back roughly $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which helps fund NPR and PBS. The bill, which ...
The bill claws back $1.1 billion in funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the entity that funds NPR, PBS and member stations.
The New York Times reports that around $1.1 billion from those cuts is money that was previously earmarked for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds both PBS and NPR.
Among the cuts are a $1.1 billion slash to funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and National Public Radio, which Republicans have argued are politically biased in their coverage.
Jamie Lee Curtis sees a pattern in Stephen Colbert’s cancellation and NPR’s cuts — and she’s calling out who’s really being silenced.
Congress voted to eliminate federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, forcing local stations nationwide to confront steep budget cuts and uncertain futures.
Congress’s vote to eliminate funding for public television and radio reminded me of when I wrote about the issue in September 2004. It was for a New York Sun editorial, “A Subsidy to Celebrate,” about ...