News

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which owns NPR and PBS, announced an ‘orderly wind-down’ due to federal funding cuts ...
CPB will ‘wind down’ operations following federal funding cut, threatening popular programs like Sesame Street and Daniel ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the entity that channels federal funds to PBS and NPR, announced that it will ...
In case you didn't know, PBS and Sesame Street have had a very, very long relationship dating back to the show's premiere in ...
Roughly $1.1 billion of the targeted cut would defund the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the non-profit that supports NPR and PBS.
Muppet artist David Bizzaro speaks out against $1 billion cuts to public broadcasting. Explore how these reductions may ...
From the editorial: "Stauber referred to public broadcasters at PBS and NPR as 'opinion journalism masquerading as unbiased ...
As a $1.1 billion federal budget cut looms over the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the entity that funds both NPR and PBS, local public radio stations and television affiliates are at risk of ...
Cuts to PBS funding could change kids’ media forever, as families opt for short-form video and online series optimized for ...
Over its several decades, the show’s setting has always been both realistic and idealistic. And it has evolved, much like the ...
But Sesame Street isn't vacating its old neighborhood, NPR's Neda Ulaby reports. She tells our Newscast unit that: "Re-edited old episodes will still be on PBS, where it has lived for 45 years.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting announced on Friday that it would begin winding down its operations after President Donald Trump rescinded $1.1 billion in funding for the nonprofit, which for ...