Baylor University To Cease Funding KWBU-FM
Baylor University will stop funding its Brazos Valley Public Broadcasting Foundation's Public News/Talk 103.3 KWBU-FM Waco TX. In a statement
radioinsight.com
radioinsight.com
Deja Vu all over again, as Baylor operated PBS KWBU-TV Channel 34 from 2000-11, before ditching it due to funding issues. The station had previously been KCTF 1989-2000 and was briefly KDYW in 2011 during an aborted sale to Daystar.
The Waco-Temple market has actually lost two PBS stations, as KNCT/46 was sold to Gray Media in 2018. The area is served via video providers with PBS stations KLRU out of Austin or KERA-TV in DFW.
KDYW - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Circling back around to KWBU FM, I wonder if a similar future might eventually be in store if the fundraising doesn't dramatically change.
Actually it’s KLRU in Austin. KLRN is in San Antonio.There was one applicant (channel 20) and it was Capital of Texas Public Telecommunications Council, licensee of PBS member-station KLRN in Austin.
KNCT/46 was on the same tower as the then co-owned 91.3 FM. Both stations made it into Austin; I recall receiving both of them on their joint first day of operation in 1970. The TV signal was marginal but viewable at my then location around 48 miles away.KNCT TV used to operate south of Killeen and didn't have much coverage in Waco before Gray bought it and moved it to Moody.
The religious right is not exactly a fan of NPR. The station carries Morning Edition and All Things Considered, plus audio from the PBS Newshour and Fresh Air.
Actually it’s KLRU in Austin. KLRN is in San Antonio.
Where I lived for many years, on national holidays, the national anthem was played before every movie and theater show. Anyone who did not stand and, preferably, put their hand over their heart, would be removed and arrested. Those dates honored Independence and the various battles and heroes who achieved it, irrespective of how good or bad the current leaders were.Besides, this is Texas, where universities expel students for not standing up for "Oh say can you see..."
Or is this a political decision? Baylor is a Southern Baptist university. The Southern Baptist Convention is among the most conservative "evangelical" denominations both dogmatically and politically.
The university press release, which appears to be the only source of information on this currently available, does not say why - now - all of a sudden - the university, which owns the station, does not want to chip in any more?
Is the university in financial trouble?
Or is this a political decision? Baylor is a Southern Baptist university. The Southern Baptist Convention is among the most conservative "evangelical" denominations both dogmatically and politically. The religious right is not exactly a fan of NPR. The station carries Morning Edition and All Things Considered, plus audio from the PBS Newshour and Fresh Air.
That's interesting. Public radio stations were preceded by educational radio stations, and almost all of them were started and operated by colleges and universities - for the most part land grant universities. In fact, one of the claimants to being the world's oldest radio station is the University of Wisconsin's WHA, Madison. Some were started by schools of engineering to experiment with then-new technology. Most were started by the schools' agricultural extension or continuing education services. The only pre-CPB public station that comes to mind that was not started by a college or university was WNYC, which was owned and operated by the City of New York (which also has City University of New York and constituent under-graduate colleges). Add to that public radio stations which started as student-run stations and later became public radio stations. Many of the public radio state networks were also started by colleges or universities.The other thing that's happening nationally is colleges and universities are getting out of the broadcast radio business. They're either selling to EMF or to local community groups. It's happening regardless of the programming.
The only pre-CPB public station that comes to mind that was not started by a college or university was WNYC, which was owned and operated by the City of New York
So, if public broadcasting becomes divorced from academia, how will it change?
Secondly, Baylor is marginally conservative on the scale of colleges and universities. Conservative politically compared to Berkeley and Sarah Lawrence, but probably closer to Texas A&M and Auburn. Not close at all to Bob Jones or Liberty. I bet if you looked up their faculty's political donations it wouldn't even be close to 50/50.
NPR has not ever been conservative and Baylor blew up their student radio station in order to create this NPR affiliate. Perhaps they felt that public radio was an important local cultural amenity that would also serve the university's image and add value to the faculty that they wanted to attract.
An exception might be HBCUs that choose to hold on to their non-comm FMs, as any sale would result in severe community blowback. Here in Houston, I would be beyond shocked if Texas Southern University or Prairie View A&M were to unload KTSU or KPVU.But a lot of universities are deciding to redirect their money towards what they call their "core mission," which is education.
It seems public stations, at least in my area, have moved away from "education." They used to run TV courses during the overnight period in which one could enroll and for which one could receive academic credit. No more. Now what they run are tantamount to infomercials.As I said earlier in this thread, the university is only cutting the funding. As far as I know, they're retaining their membership on the station's board, and I think they have a one seat majority. If the issue was programming, they can either vote to change the programming, or make their money contingent on not being used for NPR. There's a bill in congress with similar language. But a lot of universities are deciding to redirect their money towards what they call their "core mission," which is education.