• John D. Woodward, Jr.

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There are 6 comments on POV: Now Is Not the Time to Cut Funding for Public Broadcasting

  1. While CPB is a unique public-private partnership that has contributed greatly to enriching the intellectual, cultural, and ethical lives of millions of Americans, it itself is driven by certain political agendas, which are liberally biased thus I can understand why federal support is not advocated by the current government

  2. In addition there are many other benefits to the public. For example PBS stations like WGBH have pioneered media access for people with disabilities. About 50 million people in the U.S. alone benefit from closed captioning/descriptive video. While originally funded in part by federal grants these services have long since been a part of the media economy being paid for by the content providers. And being made available far beyond public broadcasting content to mainstream media to better serve audiences. Ray Joyce, former Director of Descriptive Video Service at WGBH

  3. PBS is no less a part of the coastal “Establishment” media than CNN, and no less a part of politics than the Democratic Party. It is government state-run media, but not it’s run by the bureaucracy, not run by officeholders in the Executive or Legislative branches. It is motivated by the big-government mindset that lies layers deeper in the government than what is usually deeper than what elected officials can influence or even recognize. Amidst PBS’s torrent of left-wing bias, we only get a few nuggets of good work which would probably have been better off in private media anyway.

  4. I grew up far from the US coastal regions and grew up watching PBS, especially the massive amount of quality programming from WGBH Boston. PBS and the CPB delivered quality content that effectively showed me the larger world to which I belonged. This information was not conveyed by Nickelodeon or Disney. While I still love Duck Tales, it was PBS and the CPB which led me to become a research scientist (NOVA! Bill Nye the Science Guy!) that loves to travel the world (Burt Wolf! Rick Steves!) and can fix the kitchen sink (This Old House!). Given that science teaches us how think critically, and that we live in a global economy, and that all our houses are old, we need this type of programming now more than ever.

  5. PBS, from what I read here, is wonderful and necessary. So why shouldn’t it be profitable and not dependent upon Government (taxpayer) subsidy. Most wouldn’t want to subsidize Fox News would they?

  6. I will continue to support both WGBH and WBUR – as they both do a wonderful job of reporting the news. You can argue that they should be able to make it without subsidized support from the govt., and they can, they have, and they will. But . . . this is money well spent. I wonder how many people listen, love the programming, and then do not support it because they are under the impression it is FREE.

    It is not FREE – and people who watch it and listen to it should support it.

    There is a lot of GREAT stuff on PBS – I wish more people watched and enjoyed it – including our president. I think if people did watch PBS or listened to WBUR – most people would support it – actively – DONATIONS that is.

    Should we still support public libraries? Public schools? Public streets?

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