10/6/2012 8:04:34 PM
Grants = need based hand-outs now?[Edited on October 6, 2012 at 8:14 PM. Reason : ?]
10/6/2012 8:14:09 PM
TBQH someone from CPB (which provides most of the funding for CTW) actually remarked that they could do fine without Federal funding: They'd just need to remove access to the most underserved areas to make it all work.
10/6/2012 10:58:05 PM
Romney is going to fix the government $8MM at a time8 millionso about .0002% at a time
10/6/2012 11:07:13 PM
It's worse than thatsee when funding for public broadcasting is gone, there won't be that part of the budget to trim anymorehe'll eventually need to chip away at the military and entitlements
10/6/2012 11:11:29 PM
The issue is that government is funding and giving grants to businesses that are fine without it. Imagine if they gave grants to Maury.
10/7/2012 12:09:07 AM
I wasn't aware that Maury served the purposes of education and of providing an outlet for non-advertiser-friendly performance art.
10/7/2012 12:38:05 AM
Not all grants are need based and many are competitive
10/7/2012 12:47:39 AM
the 1% needs all the help they can get.
10/7/2012 12:56:48 AM
Lets not touch defense, medicare, or social security, though.
10/7/2012 1:14:40 AM
I don't understand why liberals defend Sesame Workshop in light of this. The point about Gary Knell is 100% valid.Can someone give an intelligible reason that Sesame Street wouldn't be able to serve the under-privileged children of the world paying their CEO $150k versus $750k? Inequality in the private sector isn't in the interest of the government, but inequality as promoted by the organizations it funds sure as hell is.
10/7/2012 10:13:08 AM
Well it ignores the nature of what a grant isBut really, it's dumb because of how little money we are talking about
10/7/2012 10:16:03 AM
Not saying that I agree with federal funding for PBS (although it's something less than a drop in the bucket--entitlements and DoD need attention first)...but Sesame Street and PBS are not synonymous. The former is a subset of the latter, and i doubt that PBS on the whole is as financially secure as what's almost certainly their most successful enterprise.
10/7/2012 12:24:08 PM
10/7/2012 1:01:16 PM
These are the types of images I am seeing posted everywhere (facebook, etc). Its kind of funny knowing how much some of the employees make.
10/7/2012 3:19:53 PM
^ yes, i find this completely valid criticismI have not been happy with the years of conservative reign, nor the propaganda they find acceptable at this juncture, but the left-leaning population have been trying their darnedest to show that they're just as immune to self-awareness.I mean, honestly, this seems like the same stuff we see from teacher's unions. This is propaganda with extremely suspicious conflict of interest at the root of it. Do you know who I don't trust to take an objective view of Sesame Street's funding? That's right, Big Bird.I'm not saying I support Romney's position, but does Romney support Romney's position?The fact of the matter is that both sides are wrong. - the right is wrong for failing to talk about defense and entitlements - the left is wrong that, on principle, there is room for outrage at cuts to Sesame StreetI mean, let's look at it this way, if PBS is too wonderful of a thing to cut federal funding for, how can we be reasonable enough to decide on a national level what should be covered with health insurance?
10/7/2012 4:08:27 PM
10/7/2012 4:35:20 PM
10/7/2012 5:08:28 PM
No line item exists for Sesame StreetThey would not be cutting Sesame StreetThey would be cutting money to CPB which, through grants that Sesame Street applies for and are awarded, some money flows to Sesame Street. No one is saying its a big deal if they lose those $8MM, but its disingenuous to imply that they did not rightfully win those grants just because they don't need them to stay solvent. Often grants are for specific reasons and if you can demonstrate that you can do what the goal of the grant is, you can get the money. It often has nothing to do with need.[Edited on October 7, 2012 at 5:30 PM. Reason : N]
10/7/2012 5:29:49 PM
Naturally, it seems that the one guy wasn't the only example of high executive compensation at PBS.http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tim-graham/2009/09/29/survey-npr-ceo-made-1-3-million-bucks-year
10/7/2012 5:52:33 PM
$1.3 M for a CEO for a company of that size does not seem outrages to me, but I don't know enough to put that in perspective. So I decided to look for input from people who do.http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=search.summary&orgid=6637NPR gets a great score I'm confused though, they list CEO salary as $480k. Looks out of date. [Edited on October 7, 2012 at 6:24 PM. Reason : .]
10/7/2012 6:20:26 PM
Post.
10/7/2012 8:44:15 PM
10/7/2012 9:47:41 PM
Romney indirectly helped PBS as governor, but now he's changed his mind...
10/7/2012 11:12:46 PM
CPB, PBS, NPR, and Sesame Workshop are all private non-profit organizations and are not "inherently public" in the way a public university is inherently public. CPB comes the closest to being to being an actual government organization: it was created by the government, it receives almost all of its funding from the government (of which at least ~95% is required by law to be distributed in support of public broadcasting), and the board is politically appointed. However, CPB employees are not government employees. The other organizations (PBS, NPR, Sesame, etc) are separate and independent from CPB. Pictures such as ^^ don't really tell that story (but who's really surprised when it's from our resident dumb-fuck).As near as I can tell, CPB is the only public broadcasting related organization funded directly by the federal government--about $420 million in 2010. Member stations (which are independent of both CPB and PBS) may receive funding from state and local governments. CPB has a summary of public broadcasting funding across various organizations and sources. Tax derived money (federal, state, and local) makes up about 40.6% of public broadcasting funding. The report doesn't explicitly say, but the report is likely limited to CPB, PBS, and member stations; other organizations such as NPR, Sesame Workshop, PRI, etc. are not included.PBS' revenue in 2011 was $475.2 million. Of that, $22.3 million is from "grants and contributions". Assuming all of that comes from the CPB, only about 5% of PBS' budget could be said to be 'government funded' (though, as dtownral would point out, these are grants). Some of the money PBS receives from its member stations for content ($183.2 million) is indirect government money. I would estimate about 20% of PBS' revenue is government money (direct and indirect). Only about 5.7% of PBS' 2011 budget went to administrative costs, including the 0.1% of PBS' budget that is Paula Kerger's salary (I think you have your salary numbers confused).NPR's 2011 revenue is $173.8 million, of which only about 2% is in the form of government grants. Roughly 38.7% of NPR's revenue comes from stations purchasing content. Assuming 40.6% of that money originated as government money, somewhere around 18% of NPR's funding is ultimately sourced from the government (direct and indirect; federal, state, and local government). NPR paid its CEOs about $930k, or about 0.5% of its revenue, in 2011.Government's role in public broadcasting is certainly a subject worthy of debate. But, let's at least not pretend that anything--up to and including the complete elimination of CPB's funding--would ever have more than an at best marginal impact on the federal budget and national debt.---
10/7/2012 11:22:27 PM
Interesting points here...
10/8/2012 12:02:00 AM
WHY DOESN'T HOME DEPOT PAY THEIR CEO $150K SO I CAN GET NAILS FOR FREE
10/8/2012 10:49:11 AM
^^^ I can pretty much guarantee that Romney's statement wasn't based on any of that information.He knew the right-wing perception is that public media is liberal, and needed to blow that whistle to rally his supporters.That's why Romney won the debates... he correctly recognized that it's far more of a platform to energize his people that explain philosophies.
10/8/2012 6:58:35 PM
10/10/2012 4:12:59 PM
A former WUNC employee told me they waste tons of money and time there. He was horrified when he learned that his own mother had donated to a pledge drive.
10/11/2012 2:48:53 AM
Isn't WUNC completely listener funded?
10/11/2012 8:04:04 AM
They have received $78 mil from the state over the last 12 years, and in at least one instance have been caught shelving a documentary critical of legislators in order to protect this money.
10/11/2012 11:22:59 AM
AhAny federal grants?
10/11/2012 12:01:53 PM
You made the claim, you do the research.
10/11/2012 12:10:58 PM
No, I asked a question because I had a vague memory of them mentioning it during a pledge drive and I couldn't find anything on their website except a mention that they are listener funded. What was the documentary they shelved?
10/11/2012 12:12:59 PM
It was some sort of clusterfuck regarding censorship of a story criticizing Alcoa's polluting of the Yadkin River. The republican legislature made them promise to avoid any more coverage of the issue. A perfect example of why public sources of funds result in just as much corruption as private ones.WUNC gets $3.4mil/year from the feds and $10.7mil/year from the state, not counting numerous grants, which are obscured for obvious reasons.Less than half of their budget comes from private donations. However, it's likely that most of those donations are from corporations that aren't publicized. I'll bet Alcoa even gives them a chunk of change. At least with private media you can watch the commercials and figure out who they're taking money from.[Edited on October 11, 2012 at 12:30 PM. Reason : .]
10/11/2012 12:22:35 PM
Some would see that as a perfect example of how bringing everything to the state level just increases corruption, and had they had access to federal grants to replace the state money they would have been able to show the documentary. (But I don't know enough about the documentary to even know if that was why it was shelved)
10/11/2012 12:26:19 PM
http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/03/13/1049897/unc-tv-may-feel-a-chill-in-funding.htmlIt wasn't so much the coverage that was at issue, it was the fact that the reporter had her own friend paid by the opposition (some of whom were Republicans as listed in the article above) to do a story on Alcoa, and then used political maneuvering to get the piece aired with absolutely no oversight first. So yes, some people were a bit upset and the reporter got fired and the piece was pulled, after it aired. It wasn't so much angry Republicans shut down UNC, as Republicans were on both sides of this story, but that the reporter was shady as fuck on how she went about it.
10/11/2012 12:32:55 PM
It was shelved(and apologized for) because Alcoa's 50-year federal license to dam the river was up for renewal.
10/11/2012 12:33:25 PM
It's a good thing for certain things in our society to not be entirely profit-driven, especially things that service disadvantaged communities like PBS and the CPB. Those communities I'm talking about aren't the ones you're thinking, I'm talking about the stations in Bumfuck, Kansas that are pretty much the only reason rednecks there know how to count. Just like roads, education is something that when left entirely to the market simply will not reach a broad swathe of people outside of wealthy or high-population-density areas.And considering the benefit PBS has been dishing out for 40 years, it's probably the single best investment the government makes. Also, it would take about 43,700 PBS's to close the deficit. The fact that it's the only program Romney has suggested cutting should tell you something about just how thoroughly detailed his plan is that he wont show us.Fun fact: TLC used to be a public network too, started by NASA. Then Reagan privatized it. Now you can tune in and watch Honey Boo Boo because white trash starefests generate more ad revenue than educational programs for children.[Edited on October 11, 2012 at 2:03 PM. Reason : .]
10/11/2012 1:59:46 PM
Here's a fun debate tip:Calling your opponents or viewers bumfuck rednecks is sure to win support for your cause.Have you actually watched PBS lately? It's all pop music concerts and bad British crime drama. Hardly the realm of the intellectual elite. Their news programming is laughable and unwatched. Jim Lehrer proved his incompetency during the debate.
10/11/2012 2:09:50 PM
I'm the one advocating FOR the bumfuck rednecks getting roads and public education stations. Maybe you should have watched a bit more PBS as a kid, smc, your reading comprehension is terrible.
10/11/2012 2:14:35 PM