The nonprofit institution that provided significant funding for PBS and NPR is disbanding after nearly 60 years in operation. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting — created by Congress in 1967 — ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPR) will shut down after its board voted to dissolve the organization, marking a major shift in federal funding to PBS, NPR and hundreds of public TV and ...
The board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the nonprofit corporation created by Congress in 1968 to oversee the federal government’s investment in public TV and radio, formally voted ...
Many New Year's traditions are meant to bring prosperity in the months ahead, but America's relationship to wealth is complicated. As billionaires' influence has grown, so too has skepticism. In a ...
WASHINGTON — The Corporation for Public Broadcasting — which helped fund NPR, PBS and many local radio and TV stations — is officially shutting down, months after Congress passed spending cuts that ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), which funds PBS and NPR, announced a change to its operations in the coming months after Donald Trump signed an executive order defunding the television ...
Congress clawed back more than $1 billion in funding for the corporation in July after President Donald Trump said neither NPR nor PBS "presents a fair, accurate or unbiased portrayal" of news. The ...
Executives debated whether to allow the corporation to lie dormant after federal funding ended last year, but decided against it. By Benjamin Mullin The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which ...
PBS will premiere separate programs on science and foreign affairs next weekend after shutting the doors on its Saturday and Sunday breaking newscasts because of the federal government's cut of $1.1 ...
It’s May, 1945 in the glorious Yorkshire Dales—a time jump since the utterly heartwarming Season 5 finale when Mrs. Hall learned that her son, Edward, was alive after the sinking of the HMS Repulse.