(no title)
not2b
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7 months ago
Rural stations relied heavily on CPB funding; urban stations get most of their funding from donations or corporate underwriting. So big city public TV and radio will survive, but those in less populated areas might go under unless some other source of funding is found.
philistine|7 months ago
not2b|7 months ago
atonse|7 months ago
I tried looking for sources on station audience sizes, alternatives they might have, etc. But it was difficult to find.
jcoby|7 months ago
Sometimes streaming isn't an option. When Helene hit WNC we lost power, cell, internet, and water all at the same time. The local NPR stations were the only ones broadcasting updates on a regular cadence so we could learn what in the world was going on. And we're not far from downtown Asheville.
Some extremely rural areas only have spotty internet or no internet or cell at all and public radio is the only thing they have.
heavyset_go|7 months ago
Sure, you can stream, but the content will be focused on another locale or won't address local issues.
tptacek|7 months ago
esseph|7 months ago
Watch this clip:
https://youtu.be/xwA4k0E51Oo?feature=shared
antonymoose|7 months ago
Having moved around my PBS districts always seemed to be a metro+rural zone.
not2b|7 months ago