Difference between revisions of "Public Broadcasting Service"

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The '''Public Broadcasting Service''' (PBS) is a liberal non-profit public broadcasting [[television]] service in the [[United States]]. PBS is affiliated with [[National Public Radio]], American Public Media, and Public Radio International through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a entity of the federal government.  Each member station is owned by independently but they share programming and funding which means they show similar programs.
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The '''Public Broadcasting Service''' (PBS) is a non-profit public broadcasting [[television]] service and educational program distributor in the [[United States]]. PBS was established on October 5, 1970 as a replacement for educational network [[National Educational Television]].  It is affiliated with [[National Public Radio]], American Public Media, and Public Radio International through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, an entity of the federal government.  Each member station is owned independently but they share programming and funding which means they show similar programs.
  
PBS, along with [[NPR]], has been accused of aiming its broadcast toward wealthy, elite segments of the American population while neglecting others, who nonethless pay for the programming. And by elite, I mean the educated and willing to learn, not the finicial elite. And by neglecting, I mean they don't have their own version of are you smarter than a 5th grader. When Congress debated cutting funding for NPR and PBS, House Democrats appealed to the children's programming on PBS such as Sesame Street. Puppets of Sesame Street characters were brought into the House chambers, and Rep. [[Ed Markey]] (D-MA) commented: "Oscar the Grouch has been friendlier to the Sesame Street characters than President Bush." [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4693682.stm] Most of PBS's programming, however, is not aimed at children.  
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PBS, along with [[NPR]], has been accused of aiming its broadcast toward wealthy, elite segments of the American population while neglecting others, who nonetheless pay for the programming. When Congress debated cutting funding for NPR and PBS, House Democrats appealed to the children's programming on PBS such as ''[[Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood]]'' (1968-2001) and ''[[Sesame Street]]'' (1969-present). Puppets of ''Sesame Street'' characters were brought into the House chambers, and Rep. [[Ed Markey]] (D-MA) commented: "Oscar the Grouch has been friendlier to the ''Sesame Street'' characters than President Bush." <ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4693682.stm US public TV shows 'facing cuts'], [[BBC]]</ref>  Most of PBS's programming, however, is aimed at children as they feed over 12 hours of children's programming every day of the week versus 6–8 hours of adult programming.  
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==See also==
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* [[National Public Radio]]
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* ''[[All Things Considered]]''
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==References==
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{{communism}}
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[[Category:Broadcasters]]
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[[Category:Broadcasting]]
 
[[Category:Television]]
 
[[Category:Television]]
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[[Category:Liberalism]]
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[[Category:Liberal Bias]]
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[[Category:Liberal Organizations]]
 
[[Category:Media]]
 
[[Category:Media]]
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[[Category:Anti Second Amendment]]
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[[Category:Liberal News Organizations]]
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[[Category:Liberal Media]]

Revision as of 00:00, July 1, 2020

The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) is a non-profit public broadcasting television service and educational program distributor in the United States. PBS was established on October 5, 1970 as a replacement for educational network National Educational Television. It is affiliated with National Public Radio, American Public Media, and Public Radio International through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, an entity of the federal government. Each member station is owned independently but they share programming and funding which means they show similar programs.

PBS, along with NPR, has been accused of aiming its broadcast toward wealthy, elite segments of the American population while neglecting others, who nonetheless pay for the programming. When Congress debated cutting funding for NPR and PBS, House Democrats appealed to the children's programming on PBS such as Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood (1968-2001) and Sesame Street (1969-present). Puppets of Sesame Street characters were brought into the House chambers, and Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) commented: "Oscar the Grouch has been friendlier to the Sesame Street characters than President Bush." [1] Most of PBS's programming, however, is aimed at children as they feed over 12 hours of children's programming every day of the week versus 6–8 hours of adult programming.

See also

References