This topic could either go here or under National TV. I put it here because the focus is more specific to public non-commercial broadcasting.
The current ''New Republic'' asks the provocative question Why Are Yuppie Elites Obessed With NPR's Budget
The article says NPR gets two per cent of its budget from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; PBS gets 16 per cent. But you don't hear much expressed concern about PBS' survival or people rallying to save it. The writer contends the typical public radio listener is a well-off, middle-aged White guy but public TV's audience is more diverse and reflects the broader demographic make-up of the US (lower income and lower socio-economic status). But all the spoiled elite cares about is its precious This American Life, Car Talk and Lake Wobegon.
It is curious that in this debate it has become all about public radio (except for brief mentions of the fact that PBS was also targeted in the same "sting" by activists presenting themselves as an Arab advocacy group and didn't bite). Why is it public TV is sort of just there but public radio is something about which many people care passionately? Because radio is personal? Or maybe because public radio is unique; nobody else does what they do but dozens of cable channels now offer pretty much the same kind of programming which was once unique to public television?
The current ''New Republic'' asks the provocative question Why Are Yuppie Elites Obessed With NPR's Budget
Forget Me Elmo
Yuppie elites are too worried about NPR—and not worried enough about PBS.
...(Federal funding) cuts would hurt NPR. But what’s even more disturbing is that, in the midst of a culture war over yuppie, liberal-leaning NPR, people seem to have forgotten just how much damage would be done to vastly more egalitarian PBS. ...
The article says NPR gets two per cent of its budget from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; PBS gets 16 per cent. But you don't hear much expressed concern about PBS' survival or people rallying to save it. The writer contends the typical public radio listener is a well-off, middle-aged White guy but public TV's audience is more diverse and reflects the broader demographic make-up of the US (lower income and lower socio-economic status). But all the spoiled elite cares about is its precious This American Life, Car Talk and Lake Wobegon.
It is curious that in this debate it has become all about public radio (except for brief mentions of the fact that PBS was also targeted in the same "sting" by activists presenting themselves as an Arab advocacy group and didn't bite). Why is it public TV is sort of just there but public radio is something about which many people care passionately? Because radio is personal? Or maybe because public radio is unique; nobody else does what they do but dozens of cable channels now offer pretty much the same kind of programming which was once unique to public television?