Major funding source for NPR and other public programing voted to dissolve

| January 9, 2026 | 31 Comments

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting Board voted to dissolve CPB in response to a lack of funding from Congress. This organization funded public programing, including Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood and Sesame Street. One justification they used for this move was to prevent CPB, idle without funding, from being used for purposes other than what it was intended to be used for. Patricia Harrison, President and CEO, stated that public media was essential for a healthy democracy.

From the Corporation for Public Broadcasting:

“For more than half a century, CPB existed to ensure that all Americans–regardless of geography, income, or background–had access to trusted news, educational programming, and local storytelling,” said Patricia Harrison, President and CEO of CPB. “When the Administration and Congress rescinded federal funding, our Board faced a profound responsibility: CPB’s final act would be to protect the integrity of the public media system and the democratic values by dissolving, rather than allowing the organization to remain defunded and vulnerable to additional attacks.”

“What has happened to public media is devastating,” said Ruby Calvert, Chair of CPB’s Board of Directors. “After nearly six decades of innovative, educational public television and radio service, Congress eliminated all funding for CPB, leaving the Board with no way to continue the organization or support the public media system that depends on it. Yet, even in this moment, I am convinced that public media will survive, and that a new Congress will address public media’s role in our country because it is critical to our children’s education, our history, culture and democracy to do so.”

First authorized by Congress under the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, CPB helped build and sustain a nationwide public media system of more than 1,500 locally owned and operated public radio and television stations. Through CPB’s stewardship, public media became a trusted civic resource–delivering educational programming like Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood and Sesame Street that helped generations of children learn and grow, providing lifesaving emergency alerts during natural disasters and crises, and supporting rigorous, fact-based journalism that uncovers issues impacting people’s daily lives, connects neighbors to one another, and strengthens civic participation.

CPB’s Board determined that without the resources to fulfill its congressionally mandated responsibilities, maintaining the corporation as a nonfunctional entity would not serve the public interest or advance the goals of public media. A dormant and defunded CPB could have become vulnerable to future political manipulation or misuse, threatening the independence of public media and the trust audiences place in it, and potentially subjecting staff and board members to legal exposure from bad-faith actors.

While CPB’s chapter is ending, the mission of public media endures. Local stations, producers, journalists, and educators across the country will continue serving their communities, informing the public, and elevating local voices.

Additional Reading:

Press Release. (2026, January 5). Corporation for Public Broadcasting Board votes to dissolve organization in act of responsible stewardship to protect the future of public media. Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Link.

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AW1Ed

While CPB’s chapter is ending, the mission of public media endures. Local stations, producers, journalists, and educators across the country will continue serving their communities, informing the public, and elevating local voices.

Welcome to do so! As long as they stay out of my wallet and find their own funding.
Good luck with that.

jeff LPH 3 63-66

As the old saying goes which I’ve mentioned in past comments is that any bird can build a nest, but not anyone can lay an egg

SFC D

CPB was an excellent program, right up until it was coopted by liberals pushing an agenda. Government funding should’ve stopped right then, but unfortunately, they agreed with the agenda.

“Patricia Harrison, President and CEO, stated that public media was essential for a healthy democracy.”

She’s not wrong. Their execution of this ideal was absolutely wrong.

Not a Lawyer

Once they picked sides in politics they were done for. They failed to read the history of how they pendulum swings in American Politics.

Forest Bondurant

Yep.

During one of NPR’s news updates on January 6th, activities at the Capitol were compared to “an insurrection”.

NPR was first to make that comparison, and within 20 minutes, the MSM, politicians, and other bureaucrats ran with that term and continue to make that reference to this day.

Big Lie.

RGR 4-78

Communism and its brother Fascism have always been about the big lie.

Anonymous

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Odie

Govt funds weren’t enough that they had to do fundraisers also. I will miss this old house, but thats it.

Not a Lawyer

Why would you miss it? It is owned by ROKU now and has been widely distributed on streaming platforms since 2021.

https://www.justwatch.com/us/search?q=this%20old%20house

Odie

Don’t have Roku

Not a Lawyer

If you have a smart TV, phone or computer you should be able to install the app or just watch it. You will have to create an account and watch with ads, but there is no charge.

Here is season 1.

https://therokuchannel.roku.com/details/1651475c82c35b2caffb32e7d52887c8/this-old-house

Odie

Nice. Will look into.

Anonymous

Vietnam: A Television History on ’83 wasn’t bad (and Ken Burns’ The Civil War in ’90 sure was worth watching) but Burns’ The Vietnam War in 2017 was just a longer (and more liberal) remake of Vietnam a TV History with a big time soundtrack that reflected Trent Reznor seeing a lot of ‘Nam war movies. (Not quite just putting “Fortunate Son” on Repeat, but it hit the most popular points in a shallow manner… “Hey, man, is that Freedom Rock– well, turn it up, man!” did it better already.) PBS ain’t been what it was for a while now.

Last edited 4 hours ago by Anonymous
Hack Stone

The only time that Hack Stone watched PBS was to catch Monty Python back in the 1970’s.

Not a Lawyer

The old Flying Circus is on Tubi for free. They just don’t have innovative comedy like that anymore.

Last edited 1 day ago by Not a Lawyer
Skivvy Stacker

Same here.
And I really enjoyed Carl Sagan’s “COSMOS” in 1980…a whole lot better than the recent re-do by Neil Degrass Backwards.

Odie

I also liked red green show.

Eggs

“Men, remember, if the women don’t find you handsome, they should at least find you handy” – Red Green

Odie

I can change …. if i have to.

timactual

Episodes 1-300.

Awful Cause C

British bewwwwwbies! For free! A fan since the 70s.
The rest of PBS, not so much. At least not with such consistency.

Skivvy Stacker

Well kids, you were supposed to be funded by DONATIONS from the public, not subsidized by Tax money from the Gubmint.
Way back when you did a fine job of “educational” programming, and solid news analysis.
But as the years passed you became another sounding board for left wing ideology and weird ideas.

timactual

CPB’s time is done. “Public broadcasting” (Government broadcasting) doesn’t provide anything anymore that you cannot find on the various cable television services or the internet.

Forest Bondurant

Funny how all the federal $, private donations and corporate endowments CPB received hefore federal funds were cut off, their headquarters building received a multimillion dollar renovation a few years back that included improvements to office spaces, lounge and meeting areas, enhanced audio/visual services, dining areas, a new fitness center, and other high priced amenities, then all the exorbitant bonuses all the execcutives gave themselves, eventually affected their ability to provide “essential educational programming, trusted news, and other insightful programming to the public”.

I guess corporate sponsorship and other endowments from The Carnegie Corporation and numerous private foundations weren’t able to step up their donations.

One moronic politician equipped a few months ago that people in rural areas relied on the CPB for news and weather alerts and warnings, and without those services they would be negatively affected (as if any politicians give a shit about anyone who lives in any rural part of the country).

Good riddance to them.

A Proud Infidel®™

In the view of the vast majority of liberal politicians, life ceases to exist outside the boundaries of NYC, LA and all of the other major cities.

SFC D

Right. I grew up in the boonies on the Idaho Wyoming border. I can count on no fingers the number of times we got anything weather related from PBS or CPB. Accurate and timely information came from KID radio, AM 590 on your dial, a CBS affiliate. Also, broadcast TV, CBS and NBC. We didn’t have an ABC station then, and once we did, we were on the extreme fringe.

Skivvy Stacker

Well back in MY day we had to go outside, stick a finger in our mouth to get it wet, then hold it up to see what the weather was gonna be for the next couple of days.
That’s how we had to do it….and we LIKED it.

SFC D

That’s an excellent short term solution, but we had a couple of sayings in the shadow of the Tetons:

Only fools and newcomers predict the weather here.

And:

If you don’t like the weather, wait 30 minutes. It’ll change.

timactual

You had weather?! Why, in my day…..

timactual

It always amused me that public broadcasting always boasted that they didn’t do commercials–“This program brought to you by a grant from Mobil.”—Sound familiar? some of my favorite programs mentioned that numerous times.

SFC D

“This program brought to you by a grant from Mobil.”—“

Followed by 15 minutes on how Mobil is saving the environment.