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Licensee of WSRE ends PBS affiliation for the Pensacola TV market.

It's basically a "call-in" legal show hosted by a bankruptcy law firm. It even ran in Panama City during the late night hours.
Here's a 2005 episode. Interesting production values with their "virtual set" way back then...

Back to WSRE. If the foundation wants a PBS affiliate on the air, maybe they could partner with the University of West Florida. They already run the NPR station for the area (WUWF) and I believe run a TV channel that's on Cox Cable. WPAN is probably their best bet in leasing them a channel slot.

And down the line, if PSC fails in running WSRE as an educational independent, they may cash it out to UWF, or even FSU to relay WFSU/WFSG.

If it's more a matter of not being able to sustain a free-standing station, relaying WFSU/WFSG sounds like possibly the best solution.
 
I wonder how they plan to fund it. They decertified their foundation. So that money is gone. Fans of PBS won't pay for generic educational programming. The state cut funding. So it really comes down to the college paying for everything.
If it were a larger TV market, a more heavily populated area, there might be room for an independent public TV station, with PBS coming from WEIQ Mobile, but the area simply isn't that big, with diverse-enough programming demand.
 
If it were a larger TV market, a more heavily populated area, there might be room for an independent public TV station, with PBS coming from WEIQ Mobile, but the area simply isn't that big, with diverse-enough programming demand.

Both PBS and NPR are cutting their programming fees and making deals in other markets. As I said earlier, this sounds like it's more about politics than cutting costs.

PBS recently cut its budget by 21% and reduced station dues by about $35 million for fiscal year 2026, lowering total dues revenue by roughly 15% Current.

I assume the lawsuit by the foundation is still ongoing. I don't see any reporting of a settlement.
 
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