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Wasn't this tried before?

Mark_Giardina said:
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/budg...licans-put-npr-pbs-chopping/story?id=12915626

The last time this happened millions of Americans voiced their opposition to any cuts. But one has to wonder that with a national deficit in the trillions if the same thing will occur again?

Like Obama says, times are tough and cuts have to be made. If the president plans to cut military spending, plus programs for the poor, along with Pell Grants, then it's time to pull the plug on federal funding for NPR & PBS.

Let those who watch or listen to public broadcasting pony up their own money instead.

Looks like the days of the CEO driving around in his expensive SUV, paid for with public funds, is about to end. Which brings up and interesting point.

I've noticed that on the station's 990 tax form the salaries for the top executives are no longer listed next to their names. It appears to me that someone is trying to hide something from the public. Maybe my complaining all these years is finally paying off. ;D
 
The first time public broadcasting got on my radar screen was when WXXI scarfed up $5 million in taxpayer funds to build their State Street parking garage back in the 1990s. It was precisely the same time Pyramid sold WPXY AM & FM to Lincoln Group for the same amount - $5 mil.

Repeat: a top rated radio pair in Rochester changed hands - for what "public" radio spent on a parking garage. 20 years ago. And you KNOW that spending on these properties has accelerated beyond all reason in the intervening decades.

Even when you put pub-radio's political agenda aside this little anecdote puts into perspective, the runaway spending on these properties. VOR is absolutely correct. Public radio has an affluent audience. They can afford to support the stations and programming they like.

You know: kind of like the realities the rest of us broadcasters have to live with, every day.
 
Savage said:
The first time public broadcasting got on my radar screen was when WXXI scarfed up $5 million in taxpayer funds to build their State Street parking garage back in the 1990s. It was precisely the same time Pyramid sold WPXY AM & FM to Lincoln Group for the same amount - $5 mil.

Repeat: a top rated radio pair in Rochester changed hands - for what "public" radio spent on a parking garage. 20 years ago. And you KNOW that spending on these properties has accelerated beyond all reason in the intervening decades.

Even when you put pub-radio's political agenda aside this little anecdote puts into perspective, the runaway spending on these properties. VOR is absolutely correct. Public radio has an affluent audience. They can afford to support the stations and programming they like.

You know: kind of like the realities the rest of us broadcasters have to live with, every day.

As you may remember Mr. Savage the reason WXXI built that $5 million dollar building was the result of a Buffalo newspaper investigation into a Buffalo public broadcasting operation which had been informing the public of their financial dire straits when in fact the station had millions of dollars stashed away. The public outcry from that newspaper article prompted the management at WXXI to spend five million dollars on a new building in order to avoid a similar media investigation.

Unfortunately today the only newspaper in Rochester, the Democrat & Chronicle, is closely linked to WXXI with the "Voice of the Voter" collaboration; thus the public will never see an investigative report on the "activities" at that broadcasting operation.
 
I heard about this on the news and they were making it sound like defunding NPR/PBS would be the end of them, which I don't get. If these channels are getting viewers, then wouldn't they be able to go private, start adding commercials and keep producing the same programming as before. If these stations are really essential to the community, then they should be able to become profitable. An exemption to the non-commercial stations between 88.1 and 91.9 rule could be made for existing NPR stations.

I understand the intentions behind starting public broadcasting. They were bringing TV and radio signals to many markets which had few or none at the time. But things have changed and most areas now have more to choose from on the radio and TV OTA. With satellite radio/TV you can now get programming no matter where you are.
 
Savage said:
Repeat: a top rated radio pair in Rochester changed hands - for what "public" radio spent on a parking garage. 20 years ago. And you KNOW that spending on these properties has accelerated beyond all reason in the intervening decades.

That would be a great story, Bob...if it were true.

What WXXI built 20 years ago was not "a parking garage."

By the late 1980s, the station had far outgrown the story-and-a-half building that went up in 1974 to house one TV station and one radio station. WXXI had by then added a second radio service (AM 1370), a third was on the way (Reachout Radio, then housed at ABVI, if memory serves), and there simply wasn't room available for the expanding staff then, never mind any of the station's future needs.

The building that opened in 1989 served (and continues to serve) those expansion needs quite nicely. It's not a lavish building; indeed, it took almost 20 years to finish building out the fifth floor, which was leased out as storage space for a while. Because it was built on what had been the staff parking lot, the building does contain parking for some staffers (in the basement) and for visitors (on the ground floor), but most of the structure is fairly modest office space...lots of cubicles, lots of 1980s-era office furniture. In addition to offices for the membership, underwriting and auction departments, the education department, TV programming, communications and the management staff, there's a TV studio that's in near-constant use, a conference room and a scenery shop. And providing room for staff expansion into the new building freed up the room in the original building for more space for radio studios and programming. (In the mid-90s, the original 1974 building was completely renovated to bring the radio studios and TV control rooms up to modern standards; that project was largely funded by private donors, most notably one Tom Golisano.)

I wasn't there in 1989, so I don't know if the "5 million dollar" figure you cite is the correct one, but assuming for argument that it is, the building they got has been a pretty good value for everything the structure houses. Unlike commercial radio, where the economic horizon (especially for the big guys) is often just the next quarter or two, public broadcasters have both the luxury and the responsibility to plan for the future. Bill Pearce and the planners of the 1989 expansion did that quite well - the only thing the building's needed since then has been an occasional coat of paint and the eventual buildout of the fifth floor, long after the original structure went up. How much have the owners of WPXY, WCMF and WVOR spent on building and rebuilding and rebuilding new studios in those same 22 years? (By my count, WPXY in particular is on at least its fifth studio since then - Union Street, Winton Road, Euclid Street, HSBC and now High Falls.)

To demean WXXI's building as a mere "parking garage" is beneath you, Bob - and any time you'd like to come see the place for yourself, I'd be pleased to give you the full tour.
 
Scott Fybush said:
The building that opened in 1989 served (and continues to serve) those expansion needs quite nicely.

Don't mean to correct you my friend but construction for the five story building started shortly after I arrived at WXXI in 1990. I think the building was finished in 1991 or early 1992.

To the chagrin of us radio folks, Bill Pearce, the former GM, wanted to rent out the 5th floor to some outside company while we (radio folk) had hoped that AM & FM studios, along with the newsroom would move out of our bomb shelter to the 5th floor.

You know the rest of the story (Sorry Paul Harvey).
 
Mark_Giardina said:
Scott Fybush said:
The building that opened in 1989 served (and continues to serve) those expansion needs quite nicely.

Don't mean to correct you my friend but construction for the five story building started shortly after I arrived at WXXI in 1990. I think the building was finished in 1991 or early 1992.

I will always defer to those who were there, as opposed to those of us who came later. :D

Yes indeed, 1991-92 it was.

(But the basic point holds: the new building was far more than a "$5 million parking garage," and you can speak better than I to how cramped things were getting in the old building before the expansion.)

To the chagrin of us radio folks, Bill Pearce, the former GM, wanted to rent out the 5th floor to some outside company while we (radio folk) had hoped that AM & FM studios, along with the newsroom would move out of our bomb shelter to the 5th floor.

You know the rest of the story (Sorry Paul Harvey).

It only took another, what, 14 years to get the radio studios moved? ;D

Seriously, though - those who would so casually rail against "gold-plated studios" tend to forget how many public stations even now operate out of facilities that look like the WXXI radio studios before the 2004-05 renovations. Nothing like making a "temporary" studio built from French Road leftovers last for almost two decades. Even today, a few pieces of the old studio survive - the phone selector from the old PR&E board is still in use in the AM studio, as is the ancient Eventide delay.

Are the new digs nicer? Sure they are...and they'll get every bit of use squeezed out of them by the time they're next renovated in, what, 2025?

There's a lot to be said for doing it right, once, rather than doing it cheaply and spending the next decade in a constant state of fixing what keeps getting broken and upgrading what isn't working right. I believe my good friend in Lakeville agrees with me on that point - or else he'd have gotten a used MW25 instead of shelling out for the Cadillac of high-powered AM transmitters. (Gently used and rebuilt, to be sure, but still as good as it gets, and a darn sight nicer than the wheezing MW5 we're still nursing along on French Road...)
 
If anything, PBS and NPR will probably have public opinion MORE on their side now than in 1995. Remember, 15 or 16 years ago commercial radio and television news and talk operations were largely responsible, objective and public service-minded outlets. Today, in too many markets, we have the choice of either nonpartisan noncommercial media offering nourishing fare, commercial infotainment passing as news, or strident partisan Clear Channel/Premiere talkers on radio mixed with Fox "News" on television. True, there are still islands of quality in the commercial bands on radio, and local TV news is still by and large well done (far better done IMHO than its network counterparts) but the loudest sounds are coming from the coarsest sources.

Noncommercial public media are looking more and more like an oasis of responsible journalism amidst the partisan noise and superficial shlock, which may be the saving of the public media today.

Then again, maybe you won't mind if all your kids have to watch on their days home from school is Jerry Springer, Maury "Who's Your Daddy" Povich, steamy soaps and made-for-TV movies, or "male enhancement" infomercials...
 
Bob1370 said:
If anything, PBS and NPR will probably have public opinion MORE on their side now than in 1995.

I highly doubt it because unlike 1995 this nation faces a TRILLION dollar deficit and even Obama has come to realize that cuts need to be made in the federal budget.

Funding for public broadcasting isn't even a blip on the radar screen when lawmakers are looking to preserving government-funded programs.

NPR and PBS claims they have anywheres from 130 to 170 million viewers and listeners. If so, and I highly doubt those figures, as I do your claim that NPR has more listeners than Rush Limbaugh, then let those listeners and viewers pony up and provide private donations to keep programs on the air.

Here is another suggestion: Have the top money earning managers publicly announce they are taking a 5 to 10% wage cut.

That won't happen at your station however. Instead it will be the "worker bees" that will either go without raises for yet another year, or more jobs will be eliminated; especially those positions that were funded by grants.

My final suggestion is this. Instead of putting time, money, manpower, and effort into your station's so-called internet media, or what every it's called, go back to the basics. Meaning concentrate efforts on the over-the-air radio and television products.

I've visited your station's web site and it has very little to no comments from the general public when it comes to requesting public response to certain programs or news events.

I don't know what you folks at WXXI are worried about. Your last radio drive netted the station $200,000. Add that to the other monies raised and you might have enough just to pay your managers. Now the problem is coming up with more cash to pay for everything else.
 
I'm very sorry if I came across as "demeaning" WXXI's facility as "a parking garage." That was not the intent of the post - which I think is obvious if you read it carefully. Actually I have been in WXXI's facility many times, and it is indeed an impressive one. I have been through the radio studios, I've sat with Norm Silverstein in his office, and I've been in TV control when Nojay used WXXI for his live sat-feed to The O'Reilly Factor. The facility is a testament to the generosity of the station's funding over the past years. It would be silly to diminish it as something it isn't.

My information was that the parking garage "phase" or segment of the construction on State Street was budgeted at $5 million. As I said, it's been 20 years, but IIRC that figure was cited in the D&C or Times-Union. If it's incorrect, again, I apologize.

This whole discussion is an attempt to divert the discussion away from the point: the money which is being lavished on public broadcasting. I think this is particularly troubling given the political agenda often apparent in the final product. My point was, and remains: this is a service which can, and should, largely be listener/viewer-supported. Especially given the fact that it brazenly competes for advertising dollars in competition with commercial stations, which is a violation of its FCC authorizations.
 
Savage said:
My information was that the parking garage "phase" or segment of the construction on State Street was budgeted at $5 million. As I said, it's been 20 years, but IIRC that figure was cited in the D&C or Times-Union. If it's incorrect, again, I apologize.

Without degenerating too far into dead-horse-beating territory (certain other posters on this thread have that department more than covered), I do believe the "$5 million" figure covered the entire south building expansion. There was no separate parking garage "phase" to that construction - the building went up all at once. But you're quite right - that's a diversion.

This whole discussion is an attempt to divert the discussion away from the point: the money which is being lavished on public broadcasting. I think this is particularly troubling given the political agenda often apparent in the final product. My point was, and remains: this is a service which can, and should, largely be listener/viewer-supported. Especially given the fact that it brazenly competes for advertising dollars in competition with commercial stations, which is a violation of its FCC authorizations.

May I try to bring some focus to this discussion?

A station like WYSL or WHAM or WPXY plays essentially one role in the community it serves: it programs one reasonably consistent format, be it news/talk or top-40 music, and sells the audience generated by that programming to commercial advertisers. It may have some additional NTR activities - selling discount coupon books to listeners, or website advertising, or staging concerts, or syndicating a talk show - but those are usually fairly small adjuncts to its one basic reason for being, and they're all still funded largely by the same model of selling advertising to commercial clients.

A larger public broadcaster like WXXI, by contrast, has evolved to play many roles. A few of them - the NPR and local news and talk programming on 1370, the PBS prime-time programming on WXXI-TV, the classical music on 91.5 - are fairly high-profile activities that draw audiences that are in some cases as large as those of our commercial brethren. I'm in agreement with you, Bob, that those mass-audience functions can be and should be supported mainly by underwriting and listener/viewer donations. And in fact, they are. At least on the radio side of the building where I spend most of my time, there's essentially no government money, state or federal, funding functions such as our newsroom and our radio talk programming. This is especially true of the programming in which you perceive a political agenda. (Programming which, I'd note, includes not only Bob Smith's daily show but also Curt Smith's weekly "Perspectives," and I don't think there are two more divergent political viewpoints in one building, unless Lonsberry and Wease are in the same room.)

But here's the thing: in addition to "1370 Connection" and "Morning Edition" and "PBS NewsHour" and "Nova," there are a lot of other things happening under the WXXI banner that don't draw the kind of audiences that can directly financially support them, or that can be marketed to underwriters. There's children's TV programming that's of a much higher quality than anything Nickelodeon or Disney offer (and that's available to a lot of households that could never afford $1000 a year for cable). There are educational programs (some on the air, some offered in other ways) that work in conjunction with local school districts and colleges. There's Reachout Radio for the blind. There's an increasingly massive online presence, some of it offering niche content for which there's simply no on-air home.

It's those services - and especially the educational activities and Reachout Radio - that receive the lion's share of whatever government funding still exists. I'll concede that you can never have 100% separation of funding; all these functions share a building and at least some equipment and staff. But I do believe, very firmly, that these additional, lower-profile functions can't be sustained solely (or even largely) through member donations and underwriting. It's not my department (and I should note that as always, I speak here only for myself and not for any of my employers), but I suspect some of those functions locally are subsidized to some degree by the membership dollars that come in from the more mass-audience programming on radio and prime-time TV.

So if we're going to have an informed conversation about government funding of public media, let's at least be clear about what functions are being funded.

Zero out CPB funding, and you'd probably still be able to sustain most of what's on 1370 and 91.5 and the prime-time PBS schedule on TV with some combination of listener/viewer donations, grant money and underwriting (albeit, perhaps, in a more "enhanced" form that might more directly compete with commercial stations for the pool of ad revenue that's out there - do you really want that?) If that's all the "public media" we want as a nation, so be it.

What's being fought for, though, is all that "other stuff" - the things no commercial broadcaster in their right minds would ever want to provide. It seems to me that over the last few decades, we've made at least something of a tacit societal contract where broadcast regulation is concerned: all that high-minded "sustaining" programming that commercial broadcasters once offered by way of community service has been allowed to disappear in large part because public radio and TV have picked up that burden. Because WXXI is there to provide Homework Hotline and Assignment: The World, WUHF can run nonstop infomercials all morning and judge shows all afternoon, and Sinclair can reap whatever profits it can make from using our airwaves that way.

That's a tradeoff I can live with. But if the publicly-funded educational components of public radio and TV go away - and they will, if CPB funding gets zeroed out - I don't think commercial media get off unscathed. Would we so willingly accept the incredibly lax standards for what constitutes "educational/instructional" programming on commercial TV if there weren't the PBS kids' lineup to fill the void? Or would the WUHFs of the world start to feel pressure to replace at least one or two of those morning infomercials with something more substantial and less profitable?

There is, I think, a pretty good reason why we're not seeing very many commercial broadcast owners, especially on the TV side, taking a political stand on CPB funding: what you describe as "brazen competition" with commercial stations is really, in many cases, a fairly comfortable symbiotic relationship in which that dollar-and-change a year in per capita federal tax money (augmented by viewer and underwriter funding) lets public media provide the unprofitable vegetables so that commercial media can focus on the much more lucrative dessert.
 
I almost wish my friend Mark Giardina had not introduced this thread because it has degenerated into another anti-public broadcasting rant by Voice of Reason. VOR, we get it! You don't want your tax dollars funding public broadcasting. You are vehemently opposed to the huge salaries top managers at WXXI receive. Believe me, you're entitled to your opinion. I'm not going to call it wrongheaded. But the thing is that we first got your message two years ago! So, your constant haranguing on the subject is really growing tiresome. And I will say your unsubstantiated opinion that NPR is inflating its audience numbers is insulting. I know the people at the Radio Research Consortium who crunch the numbers for public broadcasters. They're people of integrity. It would be too easy for someone with the time and inclination to find out the truth if these people were lying about the number. The public radio data are out there for all to see. So, your questioning of the numbers without substantiating your claim with facts shows your engaging in nothing more than spin.

What disappoints me more about this thread is to read comments from a broadcaster whom I have long respected on this board. Bob Savage, how would you like me to refer to WYSL as a radio station with a right-wing bias, based on the talk programming you run? I won't go there because I'm pretty sure your local news product is objective and fair, and that your station provides a true service to listeners in the Rochester metro area. So, please don't stoop to the level of others by saying NPR News has a "political agenda," unless you adhere to the Republican talking point that all media (print and network TV) is liberal. If that's true, then I must have mis-heard a report on All Things Considered yesterday that took a very critical look at the Obama administration's approach to Egypt and former Prime Minister Hosni Mubarek over the past two weeks.

Also, Bob, I have to be blunt and say you're just plain wrong in claiming underwriting on public radio violates FCC rules. The FCC has laid out clear guidelines for public broadcasters to use. A company is allowed to offer its name, address, description of service and contact information in an underwriting message. A call to action and flowery language filled with adjectives are not allowed. My station conforms to these rules and is not violating FCC rules. We have lost business because we refused to compromise these standards. If you believe a public station is violating these rules, file a complaint with the FCC. I have read that some stations have been fined by the FCC for violating underwriting rules.

Since I have previously made my argument for continued government funding of public broadcasting, I'm not going to pull a "VOR" and repeat myself. I think my esteemed colleague Scott Fybush has quite clearly made a very strong argument for continued government support as opposed to the unsubstantiated and weak arguments against it I have read here.
 
Yes, I understand that a culture has evolved into which the requisite degree of sophistry produces a rubric by which supporters of public broadcasting rationalize advertising sales. There are of course strictures which in the minds of the public sector's supporters escape a direct, head-on charge that sales of what are in actuality paid commercial announcements, don't violate the substance and spirit of noncommercial broadcast licenses.

Public stations solicit ad dollars from advertisers. They are billed for, and pay for, commercial announcements which air on "noncommercial stations." The stations actually have staffers they call "sales reps" and they maintain "sales departments." They submit written proposals for portions of ad budgets. It is my belief that this violates the notion of a "noncommercial" license. I understand that the definition of what constitues a "commercial" has been finessed to avoid problems. But that doesn't make it right. Noncoms should exist on listener-viewer donations and whatever government funding they are able to attract, and God love them for it. But they shouldn't be able to have revenue streams both ways.

Turn the argument on its head. If noncoms can compete for ad budgets, I should be able to compete for a portion of pubcasters' government support to help run my station, hire staffers, etc.

Philip, I'm sorry I'm disappointing you. But as far as the "bias" charge goes - of course public broadcasting is biased. So are Fox News Channel, CNN, Rush, Savage, Laura et al and WYSL. News coverage will also be biased, to a degree, so long as it is created by "man who is born of woman." I just object to protestations that NPR is somehow otherwise, and to public funding of it, because of the obvious conflicts of interest.

For the record, I think the FNC claim of "fair and balanced" is nonsense. And you have never heard any promo making similar claims on WYSL.

We all are what we are. And we should admit it.
 
Savage said:
Turn the argument on its head. If noncoms can compete for ad budgets, I should be able to compete for a portion of pubcasters' government support to help run my station, hire staffers, etc.

Do those other things that noncoms do - serve the veggies, if you will - and you can and you should.

One of my other favorite small commercial broadcasters is a guy in Massachusetts named Ed Perry. Ed owns a commercial radio station, WATD 95.9, on the South Shore near Boston. And he runs a nonprofit out of the same building that provides a radio reading service for all of eastern New England. I haven't looked at his books, but I'd be very surprised if that reading service isn't getting government support.

And how about that gusher of political ad dollars that fattened so many commercial stations' bottom lines in the third and fourth quarters last year? You didn't see any noncoms "competing" for that money, because they couldn't. Nor could noncoms provide a platform for Billy and Caroline to tell us how "HUUUUUUUUUUUGE" they are. (And where did Billy go, all of a sudden?)

Historically, you're quite right, Bob - the original model for public broadcasting did not include underwriting. That evolved in the seventies as more traditional government sources of funding got slashed. (The same era also brought about the auctions that were a public TV staple for a while.)

I think most public broadcasters would be happy to return to a model without underwriting...if, as you say, they can attract sufficient government funding to make up the difference. That seems highly unlikely in the present political climate.
 
Billy Fucillo is currently an alternate host on "Parker-Spitzer." That's why nobody knows what happened to him..... :D (RIMSHOT fired on rattling grey Fidelipac...)

I have no problem with public broadcasting getting government support for specialized services like reading for the blind, etc. I'm just talking about soliciting paid on-air "advertising," and anyone is welcome to take whatever semantic side trips they like about that. I think I made my point.

FWIW: I think the ongoing debate about "who-is-the-biggest-weenie-in-broadcast-news" is ridiculous. All the available studies I've seen collectively indicate that the American public is more informed and discerning than ever before in our history (and any of us can step up and claim a share of credit for that.) I further think that people are smart enough to consume talk radio, NPR, TV network news, the cable news-talkers and the internet - the media of their choice - and draw their own conclusions. Obsessing on whether NPR, Fox, talkradio or whoever are "biased" is a fool's errand - not only because they're ALL biased, but because it really doesn't matter. Example: try expressing a definitive answer to the proposition, "tell me what a FACT is."

I object to any government involvement in news media - financial or otherwise. My concern isn't just about broadcasting. Somebody was publicly musing about government bailouts of daily newspapers, which aren't doing so swell lately. Despite the creaky antiquity of news media printed on paper, I loudly object to that as much as I do government funding of NPR.

You've either got 100% privately-owned, independent and principled media. Or you've got Pravda. There's nothing in between. Check with your favorite Venezuelan (and be sure to note how, as recently as five years ago, "they never thought it would happen there.")
 
Philip_Airtime said:
I almost wish my friend Mark Giardina had not introduced this thread because it has degenerated into another anti-public broadcasting rant by Voice of Reason.

Yeah I am starting to regret it also. Perhaps its time for me to stop posting on here. After all it's been 7 years since I left the business full time and I am so out-of-the-loop to what's going on that I should just visit once in a while, read the messages, then go do something else.
 
Mark, please stick around. An external perspective informed by years of internal experience is a valuable point-of-view in any forum. Besides, you started it.

You can't expect a random bunch of liberals and conservatives to ever agree on mutually exclusive matters of political principle. Arguments are fun for a while, but eventually the only participants left in the room are the boring ones, endlessly repeating.

"Hey you, pubcasters... get off of my lawn!"

However, I don't believe there can be any argument among us that broadcasting is not facing a financial crisis. Money is getting tight, and we're all getting pretty defensive of our accustomed turf.

Let's be honest. Whether public or private, the old revenue streams aren't coming back anytime soon. We'll all have to make other arrangements. Instead of bickering, let's discuss some possible solutions.

How about this for a topic: the convergence of 'public' and 'commercial' broadcasting into a vigorous hybrid that combines the best of both worlds and is survivable into an uncertain future.

Is that convergence already underway? If so, should it be stopped? If not, should it be encouraged?
 
The original idea of "public broadcasting" was that public money would fund it. It would be free of commercial influence, and could provide programming that would not muster enough support from commercial broadcasters.

Then, the money dried up. To replace public funding, public broadcasters were "allowed" to pursue underwriters. Underwriters and grants became more of a factor than public money. Donations from listeners who appreciated the limited interruptions still make up a major funding source. Smart stations built up endowments. Not-so-smart stations didn't.

We now have two levels of public broadcasting. There's the typical NPR/PBS mass appeal programming that scores well with consumers. It's the meat and potatoes of public broadcasting. And, as the estimable Mr. Fybush reminds us, there are alternative channels and presentations like classical music, Homework Hotline, childrens programming, cable and DT alternate channel offerings, and local public affairs shows that are the vegetables of the broadcasting world. Public radio has become the last bastion of local news that at least attempts to be unbiased in many markets.

If CPB funding is cut, the meat and potatoes will survive. The vegetables will get pushed off the plate. The fat cats won't get any slimmer, but there may be fewer of them. The worker bees will find fewer friends in the hive. For my part, I'm willing to see my $2 in taxes got to the CPB instead of some congressman's pet project aimed at promoting his re-election.
 
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