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title,short_name,city,state_abbreviation,url,about_html,logo_src,productions_html
"Appalshop, Inc. (WMMT and Appalshop Films)","Appalshop, Inc.",Whitesburg,KY,http://www.appalshop.org/,"","",""
Arkansas Educational TV Network (AETN),Arkansas Educational TV Network,Conway,AR,https://www.myarkansaspbs.org/,"<p>Arkansas PBS is Arkansas’s only statewide public media network, which enhances lives by providing lifelong learning opportunities for people from all walks of life. Arkansas PBS delivers daily, essential, local, award-winning productions and classic, trusted PBS programs aimed at sharing Arkansas and the world with viewers through multiple digital platforms, including on-demand services and YouTube TV, and the distinct channels Arkansas PBS, Arkansas PBS Create, Arkansas PBS KIDS, Arkansas PBS WORLD and Arkansas PBS AIRS on SAP. Learn more at myarkansaspbs.org.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/arkansas_pt_logo.png,""
BackStory,BackStory,Charlottesville,VA,https://www.backstoryradio.org/,"","",""
Center for Asian American Media,Center for Asian American Media,San Francisco,CA,https://caamedia.org/,"<p><em>The Center for Asian American Media</em> (CAAM) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to presenting stories that convey the richness and diversity of Asian American experiences to the broadest audience possible. CAAM funds, produces, distributes and exhibits works in film, television and digital media. For 37 years, CAAM has exposed audiences to new voices and communities, advancing our collective understanding of the American experience through programs specifically designed to engage the Asian American community and the public at large.</p><p>Items in <a href=""https://americanarchive.org/special_collections/caam-collection"">The Center for Asian American Media Special Collection</a> were digitized as part of the <a href=""https://pbpf.americanarchive.org/"">American Archive of Public Broadcasting’s Public Broadcasting Preservation Fellowship</a> by Fellow Tanya Yule, with a partnership between the Center for Asian American Media, The Bay Area Video Coalition and San José State University.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/caam_logo.jpeg,""
Chicago Public Radio (WBEZ-FM) and Vocalo.org,WBEZ,Chicago,IL,http://www.wbez.org/,"","",""
"Cincinnati Public Radio (WGUC-FM, WMUB-FM, WVXU-FM)",Cincinnati Public Radio,Cincinnati,OH,http://www.cincinnatipublicradio.org/,"","",""
Colorado Public Television,Colorado Public Television,Denver,CO,http://www.cpt12.org/,"<p>Originally known as KBDI Channel 12, Colorado Public Television (CPT12)
is a unique civic resource and one of the country’s first alternative public television
services. CPT12 provides important local, national and international programming
services that are otherwise not available in Colorado.</p><p>KBDI began operations
in Broomfield, Colorado, with transmitting facilities on Squaw Mountain in Clear
Creek County. At 11,500 feet, the site remains the highest of any full-power television
station in the nation. From there, KBDI began serving first the Denver Metro area,
and then the entire Colorado Front Range.</p><p>Today, Colorado Public Television has
grown to serve 85 percent of the state’s population. Ongoing improvements to its
transmitters and wider digital carriage on cable and satellite systems are extending
the station's reach in almost every direction across the state. Beyond Denver
and the Front Range, CPT12 is increasingly received in various Western Slope and
Eastern Plains communities, ever broadening its service throughout Colorado.</p><p>Since
2003, the station has offered digital programming on three multicast channels.
Today, these three channels include CPT12's flagship signal (12.1), a diverse
mix of local, national and international programming and infused with quality
PBS shows; CPT12+ (12.2), the best of independently produced documentaries, music,
travel, exercise, cooking, public affairs and more; and MHz Worldview (12.3),
a lineup of programs from around the world, including world news, foreign affairs,
international mysteries, world music, sports, and foreign films.</p><p>Frequently stretching
the boundaries of public television, the station has been called many things –
progressive, provocative, experimental, controversial, outrageous, courageous
and more as it has worked to illuminate key social issues, and provide a platform
for the underserved. CPT12 has always championed experimentation, creativity,
new ideas and high broadcasting standards – all while working on a shoestring
budget. Today, CPT12 maintains its independent spirit, even as it explores new
media outlets, expands its mission and deepens its community involvement.</p><p>Described
as “the little station that could” by the Denver Post, Colorado Public Television
remains lean and light on its feet – a small, frugal station that continues to
deliver programming that is relevant, informative, entertaining and thought-provoking.</p><p>Colorado
Public Television's tagline, “World View, Community Voice,” represents the station's
mission, programming choices, community activities and engagement with its Colorado
constituents. A global perspective combined with local conversations will continue
to be CPT12's guide into the future.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/colorado_pt_logo.png,"<p>Colorado Inside Out</p><p>Sounds on 29th</p><p>Studio 12</p><p>Tierra O Muerte:
Land Or Death - 1991 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award</p><p>Stories of Elyria - 1992
Regional Emmy for Best Documentary</p><p>Everything Has A Spirit - 1994 First Place
Documentary Award, Indian Film and Video Competition</p><p>Snapshots from the DNC -
2008 Colorado Broadcasters Association Award of Excellence for Best News or Public
Affairs Special</p><p>Colorado Inside Out “Circa 1858” and Studio 12 “Sudan” (tie winners)
- 2009 Regional Emmy Award for Best Interview/Discussion Program</p><p>Studio 12 “Back
to Sudan” - 2009 Colorado Broadcasters Association Award of Excellence for Best
News or Public Affairs Special</p><p>Allen True’s West - 2009 Colorado Broadcasters
Association Certificate of Merit for Best Mini-Documentary or Series</p><p>Colorado
Inside Out “Circa 1959” - 2010 Regional Emmy Award for Best Interview/Discussion
Program</p><p>Sandzen: Ecstacy of Color - 2010 Colorado Broadcasters Association Award
of Excellence for Best Mini-Documentary or Series</p><p>Studio 12 “Return to Iwo Jima”
- 2010 Colorado Broadcasters Association Award of Excellence for Best News or
Public Affairs Special</p><p>Colorado Inside Out “Circa 1935” - 2010 Colorado Broadcasters
Association Certificate of Merit for Best News & Public Affairs Special / 2011
Regional Emmy Award for Best Interview/Discussion Program</p><p>Rex Ray: How to Make
a Rex Ray - 2010 Colorado Broadcasters Association Certificate of Merit for Best
Mini-Documentary or Series</p><p>Sounds on 29th - 2012 Colorado Broadcasters Association
Certificate of Merit for Best Mini-Documentary or Series</p><p>Studio 12 ""Aurora Theater
Shooting"" - 2012 Colorado Broadcasters Association Award of Excellence for Best
Public Affairs Special Category</p><p>Studio 12 ""Honoring America's War Heroes"" -
2012 Colorado Broadcasters Association Certificate of Merit for Best News Special/Public
Affairs Special</p>"
"Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc",WPBT2,Miami,FL,http://www.wpbt2.org/,"","",""
Connecticut Public Broadcasting,Connecticut Public Broadcasting Network,Hartford,CT,http://www.cpbn.org/,"<p>In October 1962, the Connecticut Educational Television Corporation
began broadcasting over station WEDH-TV (Channel 24) in black and white from the
basement of the Trinity College Library in Hartford, Connecticut. In the beginning,
motivated and eager individuals had a vision: to enrich people's lives through
high-quality, non-commercial, educational programming. Institutions like Trinity
College and the State of Connecticut supported this goal of reaching out to the
community through public broadcasting.</p><p>The station broadcast its first local
children’s programming a few weeks after it went on the air, followed a month
later by a biweekly local series highlighting the world of arts, entertainment
and public affairs in the state. A mobile truck arrived in 1967, color in 1968,
auctions in 1972, and pledge in 1973. By 1974, three additional stations across
the state had joined WEDH-TV and CPTV was born. The statewide network earned its
first Emmy Award in 1977, received its first satellite transmission in 1979, and
taped its first national pledge special in 1985.</p><p>The first public radio station
in Connecticut signed on in June 1978, and soon Connecticut Public Radio (WNPR)
joined CPTV to form what is now known as Connecticut Public Broadcasting. Initially
airing primarily classical and radio music, WNPR now focuses on news and information.
Together, the two community-supported, statewide public broadcasting networks
are dedicated to serving Connecticut with a mix of educational, news, public affairs,
children's and entertainment programming and services. </p><p>Today, CPTV and WNPR
reach the entire state of Connecticut – an estimated 550,000 television viewers
and more than 240,000 radio listeners each week. Connecticut Public Broadcasting
is the state’s only locally owned media organization producing TV, radio, print
and Internet content for distribution to Connecticut’s wide-ranging and diverse
communities.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/cpbn_logo.png,"<p>Mundo Real (CPTV, 1976-1978) - One of the first television series
to focus on a Puerto Rican family, Mundo Real was a Spanish-English bilingual
educational children’s series aimed at ages 7-11. It was funded by four successive
grants from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. A total of
39 episodes were produced. The series was syndicated to commercial and public
television stations throughout the country, airing on at least 60 in 1978 and
PBS aired episodes nationally in 1981. </p><p>Open Air New England / The Faith Middleton
Show (WNPR, 1981-Present) - The two-time Peabody Award-winning Faith Middleton
Show has been widely recognized for fostering insightful, thought-provoking conversation
for more than 30 years. Faith offers her listeners some of the world's most fascinating
people and subjects. The show has been inducted into the Connecticut Magazine
Hall of Fame as “Best Local Talk Show.” </p><p>Barney & Friends (CPTV, 1992-2005) -
For over a decade, CPTV co-produced Barney & Friends for PBS. A CPTV executive
thought Barney might be a good fit for television after renting a Barney video
for his daughter. When it premiered in April 1992, the series was a huge hit,
far more popular than anyone could have possibly imagined. </p><p>CPTV UConn Women's
Basketball (CPTV, 1994-2012) - CPTV was the TV broadcast home of the phenomenally
successful UConn Women’s Basketball team for 18 years. With some of the consistently
highest ratings and strongest membership levels of any program on public television
for close to two decades, UConn Women’s Basketball on CPTV is considered by many
to be the most successful local franchise in public television history. </p><p>Infinity
Hall Live (CPTV, 2011-Present) - Since 2011, CPTV has produced and distributed
nationally to public television stations across the country this Emmy-award winning
series that provides an all-access pass to engaging performances and backstage
conversations with today’s most intriguing musical artists. It offers authentic
and heartfelt performances taped at Infinity Music Hall, an acoustically perfect
Victorian-era concert hall in Norfolk, CT. Artists featured on the series include
The Barenaked Ladies, Joan Osborne, Fountains of Wayne, Tori Amos, and Wilson
Phillips.</p>"
CUNY TV,CUNY TV,New York,NY,http://www.cuny.tv/,"","",""
Detroit Public Television (aka DPTV and WTVS),Detroit Public Television,Wixom,MI,http://www.dptv.org/,"","",""
Donald Voegeli,Donald Voegeli,Madison,WI,,"","",""
"Film & Media Archive, Washington University in St. Louis","Film and Media Archive, Washington University in St. Louis",St. Louis,MO,http://library.wustl.edu/spec/filmandmedia/about/,"","",""
"Friends of WWOZ, Inc.",WWOZ,New Orleans,LA,http://www.wwoz.org/,"","",""
Georgia Public Broadcasting,Georgia Public Broadcasting,Atlanta,GA,http://www.gpb.org/,"","",""
Idaho Public Television,Idaho Public Television,Boise,ID,http://idahoptv.org/,"","",""
Illinois Public Media (WILL),WILL Illinois Public Media,Urbana,IL,http://will.illinois.edu/,"<p>The radio station that became WILL first signed on the air on March
27th, 1922 on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The
initial call letters were WRM for “We Reach Millions,” which was likely an overstatement
since the station shared its transmitter tube with faculty in the Department of
Electrical Engineering. But by the late 1920s, WILL-AM was broadcasting a regular
schedule of news, music performances, and programs intended to extend the educational
mission of the University of Illinois across the entire state.</p><p>In 1941 WILL-FM
signed on as the first FM radio station licensed to a university. Station engineers
wired 20 buildings across the campus to allow live broadcasts of classroom lectures
and public events. WILL broadcast many pivotal moments in our nation’s history,
through the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, the Civil Rights Movement,
and the tumultuous social changes in the 1960s and 70s. Recordings of many of
these broadcasts were preserved in the University of Illinois Archives, and are
now becoming part of the American Archive. </p><p>In 1951 the newly-formed National
Association of Educational Broadcasters began delivering programs to noncommercial
radio stations across then United States from Gregory Hall in Urbana, Illinois,
the home of WILL Radio. The NAEB network emerged from conferences at the University
of Illinois’ Allerton House, underwritten by the Rockefeller Foundation, which
led to a growing recognition of the need for a national system of public broadcasting.
In 1961 the NAEB moved its headquarters from the Urbana campus to Washington D.C.
to be closer to the campaign to win federal support for creation of a public television
and radio system.</p><p>WILL-TV signed on in 1955, broadcasting programs produced by
WILL and other educational broadcasters. Throughout the 1950s and 60s, WILL-TV
aired a mix of telecourses offered by university departments, along with news,
documentaries, and children’s programming. </p><p>With the signing of the Public Broadcasting
Act of 1967, what had been known as educational broadcasting became part of an
emerging public broadcasting system. WILL joined the PBS and National Public Radio
networks as they became central points for television and radio program distribution.
During the 1970s, programming on WILL Radio and Television became more focused
on news and public affairs, as part of the growing national network of professional
public broadcasting stations. </p><p>With the emergence of the World Wide Web, WILL
embraced a new model of multi-platform content production and distribution. With
“digital first” becoming the mantra of the Internet age, WILL has worked to innovate
more effective ways of producing and distributing “born digital” content, while
preserving the rich historical record contained in its media archives.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/will_logo.png,<p>Illinois Broadcast Archives</p><p>African American Life in Central Illinois</p><p>WILL News</p><p>Focus 580</p><p>The Afternoon Magazine</p><p>Central Illinois World War II Stories</p>
Internet Archive,Internet Archive,San Francisco,CA,https://archive.org/,"",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/internet_archive_logo.png,""
Iowa Public Radio,Iowa Public Radio,Des Moines,IA,http://iowapublicradio.org/,"<p>Iowa Public Radio was created in 2004 by the Iowa Board of Regents to manage
the radio groups of Iowa State University, University of Iowa and University
of Northern Iowa. This statewide public radio network (a total of 24 stations)
now serves 236,000 listeners with three programming streams: News, News/Studio
One and Classical. IPR’s combined radio groups serve rural and urban Iowa,
touching all of Iowa’s 99 counties. </p><p>Our history is long and proud: Iowa State University and University of Iowa
each have public radio stations that are nearly a century old, with FCC
licenses that were among the first 100 radio licenses ever granted, and
our statewide network is one that other states look to as a model. This
century of service to and for Iowans is the foundation for our future.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/iowa_pr_logo.png,""
Iowa Public Television,Iowa Public Television,Johnston,IA,http://www.iptv.org/,"","",""
James F. Voegeli,James F. Voegeli,Madison,WI,,"","",""
KAKM (Alaska Public Media),KAKM Alaska Public Media,Anchorage,AK,http://www.alaskapublic.org/,"<p>Alaska Public Media harnesses the power of multiple media platforms to make a more informed and connected life possible for all Alaskans. Alaska Public Media produces and presents news and content that provides lifelong learning opportunities in public affairs, health and leisure, science and nature, economic and social development, civic engagement and world events. The company is located in Southcentral Alaska and is comprised of <a href=""http://www.alaskapublic.org/kska/"">KSKA</a> radio, <a href=""http://www.alaskapublic.org/television/"">KAKM-TV</a>, Create TV, PBS KIDS, and <a href=""http://alaskapublic.org/"">alaskapublic.org</a>. Alaska Public Media also operates the Statewide News and a shared television service with KTOO in Juneau and KYUK in Bethel. Alaska Public Media and its affiliates deliver content that reaches 97% of the population of Alaska.</p><p>Alaska Public Media offers trusted, award-winning national programming including Morning Edition, All Things Considered, PBS NEwsHour, Nova, Masterpiece, and Frontline. The company also produces Alaska-specific programs including Indie Alaska, Alaska Insight, Alaska News Nightly, Talk of Alaska, Line One: Your Health Connection, Alaska Morning News, Alaska Economic Report, Hometown, Alaska, Outdoor Explorer, and State of Art. Additionally, it produces podcasts such as Iditapod and Midnight Oil.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kakm_logo.png,""
KBOO Community Radio,KBOO Community Radio,Portland,OR,https://kboo.fm/,"","",""
"KCAW-FM (Raven Radio Foundation, Inc.)",KCAW,Sitka,AK,http://www.kcaw.org/,"<p>KCAW-FM is a non-commercial, community radio station owned and operated
by the Raven Radio Foundation, Inc. of Sitka, Alaska. Since signing on the air
March 6th, 1982, KCAW has been broadcasting a diverse and vibrant program schedule
to the Southeast Alaskan communities of Sitka, Angoon, Elfin Cove, Kake, Pelican,
Port Alexander, Tenakee Springs, Yakutat, as well as a wide expanse of the coastal
fishing grounds.</p><p>KCAW provides essential information services such as Emergency
Alert System and AMBER announcements; severe weather warnings and local, regional,
state, national and international news as well as entertainment programming to
a combined listening population of 11,748. The residents of these coastal communities
rely on KCAW for instantaneous information regarding tsunami warnings and storm
threats.</p><p>Volunteer participation and community involvement have always been key
components of our mission. Raven Radio currently has more than 1200 members and
100 active volunteers. In the past 20 years, KCAW has trained more than 700 on-air
volunteers, and in the past week, more than 50 volunteers have been on the air.
KCAW has built a solid reputation for training producers and several former staff
and volunteers are now award winning national producers.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kcaw_logo.png,"<p>One of the productions Raven Radio is most proud of is the original radio series ""Haven Bay"". Scores of writers, actors, musicians and technicians worked for several years to create four seasons featuring dozens of five minute modules following the adventures of the unique individuals in this remote fictional(?) Alaskan town.</p>"
KCPT (KCPT Public Television 19),KCPT,Kansas City,MO,http://www.kcpt.org/,"<p>On March 29, 1961, Channel 19 signed on the air as KCSD, an instructional
television station owned and operated by the Kansas City Missouri School
District. Ten years later, when the district chose to relinquish its broadcast
license, a group of civic leaders including Homer Wadsworth and Charles Curran
used gifts from George Powell, Sr. and John Francis to provide for the
establishment of a non-profit agency to create a public television station
for Kansas City and the surrounding areas of Kansas and Missouri. Ownership
of the broadcast license was granted in January 1972, creating a
community-licensed public television station operating under the call
letters KCPT. KCPT began transmitting national programs offered by the
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in 1970.</p><p>Today KCPT is a telecommunications center serving over 2.2 million potential
viewers with quality television programs available to anyone with a television
set within a 34-county radius. Though now a community licensee, KCPT continues
to provide education services to more than 120,000 students and 8,000+
teachers in K-12 schools with instructional television and online services
within Missouri and Kansas. The station also provides educational programming
and support services to early childhood students, parents and teachers and
college distance learning efforts. 2013 brought two major changes to KCPT.
The station purchased The Bridge, 90.9FM, a public radio all music format
station, placing great emphasis on local musicians, and opened the Hale
Center for Journalism focusing resources on regional stories.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kcpt_logo.png,"<ul>
<li>KC Illustrated</li>
<li>Marquee</li>
<li>State House Debates</li>
</ul>"
KCTS 9,KCTS 9,Seattle,WA,http://kcts9.org/,"","",""
KDLG-AM,KDLG,Dillingham,AK,http://kdlg.org/,"","",""
KDNA-FM,KDNA,Granger,WA,http://www.kdna.org/,"","",""
KEET,KEET,Eureka,CA,http://www.keet.org/,"<p>KEET Public Television educates and enriches our communities by providing informative, entertaining programs and innovative outreach, creating public dialogue on local and global issues, and building vital community partnerships.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/keet_logo.png,""
Ken Burns - Florentine Films,Ken Burns - Florentine Films,Walpole,NH,http://www.florentinefilms.com/,"","",""
KET - The Kentucky Network,KET - Kentucky Educational Television,Lexington,KY,http://www.ket.org/,"","",""
KEXP-FM,KEXP,Seattle,WA,http://www.kexp.org/,"<p>Beginning as a tiny 10-watt station back in 1972, KEXP has grown
over the years into an innovative, influential cultural force in the Seattle community
and beyond. Some of the station's milestones include:</p><p>1972 -KCMU begins broadcasting
as a student-run station from a 10-watt transmitter at 90.5 FM atop McMahon Hall
on the University of Washington campus.</p><p>1981- UW budget cuts mean KCMU becomes
a community supported, listener powered station.</p><p>1982- Increased wattage (182-watts)
means listeners hear KCMU outside the University District for the first time.</p><p>1985-
KCMU forges the musical philosophy and programming focus that defines us today,
adding hip hop, roots, blues, contemporary global music, reggae, jazz, and more
to its lineup.</p><p>1986- KCMU moves to 90.3 FM, relocates its transmitter to Capitol
Hill, and boost its power to 400-watts so that listeners as far as 15 miles away
can pick up the signal.</p><p>1991- Seattle’s grunge scene explodes and KCMU is there,
championing local artists, venues, and record labels.</p><p>1999- KCMU partners with
the UW’s technology R&D team to develop innovative ways to serve more music lovers
via new media.</p><p>2000- KCMU is the first station in the world to offer uncompressed
CD-quality audio on the Internet. KCMU moves from its long-time home in the Communications
Bldg. (CMU) to Kane Hall.</p><p>2001- With the help of venture philanthropy from the
Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, KCMU becomes KEXP 90.3 FM, moving to its first
high-tech studios. KEXP nearly doubles its wattage from 400 to 720, serving many
more people in the Puget Sound, and creates more ways for people across the world
to enjoy the KEXP experience. KEXP’s UW engineers develop radio’s first real-time
playlist.</p><p>2002- KEXP launches radio’s first streaming archive. </p><p>2003- KEXP develops
radio’s first cell phone stream.</p><p>2004- KEXP.org wins the Webby Award for Best
Radio Website.</p><p>2005- KEXP offers first live performance podcast.</p><p>2008- KEXP
teams up with Radio New York to produce Radio Liberation programming for the New
York airwaves. The programs aired through 2011.</p><p>2011- KEXP renews its collaboration
with UW for a 30-year term.</p><p>2012- KEXP celebrates its 40th anniversary. KEXP
partners with Seattle Theater Group and Starbucks to launch the Little Big Show
concert series with 100% of proceeds from ticket sales benefitting arts-based
programming and education for Seattle-area youth.</p><p>2013- KEXP partners with the
City of Seattle to build its New Home at Seattle Center, revolutionizing the way
contemporary artists and music is championed and nurtured in our community and
beyond. As part of the iconic local label’s Silver Jubilee, KEXP teamed up with
Sub Pop and Seattle Center to broadcast from the top of the Space Needle.</p><p>2014-
KEXP launches live video streaming service, KEXP Now. KEXP YouTube channel reaches
500,000 subscribers and over 270 million views. UW Board of Regents formally transfers
the KEXP 90.3 FM broadcast license from its ownership at University of Washington
to the Friends of KEXP nonprofit. This move helps secure KEXP’s future to champion
music and discovery for our three beneficiaries: music lovers, artists, and Seattle’s
vibrant music community.</p><p>2015- KEXP breaks ground on new home at Seattle Center.
Construction Begins February 2015 on KEXP’s New Home.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kexp_logo.png,""
KGLT-FM,KGLT,Bozeman,MT,http://www.kglt.net/,"<p>On the air for 47 years, KGLT 91.9fm, alternative public radio in
Southwest Montana, has entertained and shared diverse music played by live DJ’s
around the clock, as well as informative programming and public service announcements,
with its listeners. KGLT is located on the campus of Montana State University
(MSU), Bozeman. With 90 live announcers playing their choice of music 22 hours
per day, KGLT produces 1,500 to 2,000 public service announcements and offers
three DJ apprentice classes yearly. Approximately one third of the public service
announcements (PSAs) relate to campus offerings such as new classes, recreational
and volunteer opportunities, events, and informing students and employees committees
and programs in existence to help and protect them: diversity, women's issues,
returning vet issues, handicap rights, rape alerts, and drunk driver ride home options.
Public service issues on and off campus include AIDS awareness, medical care and
preventative options, LBGTQ support, bullying, parenting, and environmental awareness.
The KGLT website hosts a Community Calendar that announces lectures, concerts,
classes, nature programs, and exhibits in all areas where there are radio signals.
Environmentally, Montana is a rare combination of being an ‘AG’ or agricultural
state, because of all the ranching and farming, and a state also focused on maintaining
its land untainted by industry. Montana is dependent on the tourist trade for
fishing, hiking, and hunting as well as summer and winter recreation. It is one
of the only states making a conscientious effort for a meeting of the minds of
the ranchers and outdoors enthusiasts. As a result, there is a lot of informative
and educational discussion offered and shared as PSAs on the air. </p><p>The audiences
reached are diverse; KGLT ranks in the top 25% of 21 stations in Gallatin County
and collaborates with NPR stations in Montana. KGLT is the matriarch of community
radio in the state of Montana, offering openness, inclusiveness, and commitment
to community. The goal for KGLT is to reach more listeners in order to offer
them this familial yet professional inclusivity, so that they may benefit from
the information and education KGLT provides in music and public service.</p><p>Apprentice
classes give staff the opportunity to mentor students, helping them to live up
to their potential to become informed, comfortable, well spoken, generous, and
ethical.</p><p>New in 2014, KGLT has worked with the Central Washington University
radio station to help them build financial support.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kglt_logo.png,"<p>KGLT is the Emergency Alert System for Gallatin County, broadcasts
the daily avalanche and ski reports, announces school closings, and gives a fishing
report during the fishing season. </p><p>KGLT has an on air calendar called “Unzipping
the Weekend”, sharing entertainment events and locations. KGLT informs the public
of City and County open forums regarding environmental and planning issues including
water quality, building, parks, and development. </p><p>Listener's Personals is a
daily report of lost animals, ride sharing, and more, with a trusted reputation
for helping people get the help they need. </p><p>KGLT worked with Superintendent of
Schools Denise Juneau, Montana Team Nutrition and first lady of Montana, Lisa
Bullock to produce eleven announcements for use by any other station free of charge
and posted on the Montana Food Bank Network website. The aim of the project was
to spread information about the importance of breakfast for students’ abilities
to retain information and learn. In the interest of students forging ahead to
reach their highest potential, a KGLT student employee who is in the Music Technology
program wrote the background music and was given credit and recognition for that.</p><p>The Tellin’ Ellen program that collaboratively airs on National Public Radio
stations in Montana, produced at KGLT, has included the subjects of Depression
and Suicide, Mid-life job changes for women, the art of writing, an interview
with MSU President Waded Cruzado, the first woman and Latina to hold this influential
and important issue in Montana, a discussion about Humane Education with the Director
of Education for the Humane Society of the United States and Giving in the workplace
(ie. Workplace payroll deduction options in an interview with the Executive
Directors of United Way and Montana Shares.</p><p>KGLT produces ""Chrysti the Wordsmith"",
a two minute, 20 year old program exploring the origins and histories of words,
phrases and idioms in the English language. The series runs on both National Public
Radio stations in Montana: Yellowstone Public Radio in Billings and Montana Public
Radio in Missoula. It also is on KCPW in Salt Lake City and worldwide on Armed
Forces Radio and Television Network. </p><p>""Montana Medicine Show"", also produced
at the station, consists of two minute segments of Montana history and is researched,
written and narrated by Bozeman High School Award winning History teacher, Derek
Strahn. It airs six times a week on KGLT and seven times per week on three AM
stations in Eastern Montana. A second book of Medicine Show stories is coming
out by summer, 2015 and the series itself will be offered to libraries across
the state. The first, published in 2014 is called The Montana Medicine Show's
Genuine Montana History, by B. Derek Strahn, Montana High School History Teacher
of the Year.</p>"
KGNU-FM,KGNU,Boulder,CO,http://www.kgnu.org/,"","",""
KGTF (PBS Guam),PBS Guam,Mangilao,GU,http://pbsguam.org/,"<p>PBS Guam (KGTF) is Guam’s public media station, delivering exceptional programs from national,
regional and local sources since 1970. PBS Guam is PBS’ western-most member station, located
approximately 3,800 miles west of Hawaii and 1,500 miles south of Japan; it is uniquely situated
to bring together east and west content themes - through broadcast and other multimedia
platforms - that serve the public interest and engage the island’s blend of cultures. </p><p>Video archives from past decades, along with present work, reflect a great deal of the station’s
productions. They offer viewers an historical Guam and are perspectives told by the island’s
diverse local population. The archives contain programs that encompass numerous cultural,
educational, biographical, political, military and environmental topics. </p><p>The television station has come a long way from its humble beginnings. Today, PBS Guam is
pleased to uphold the tradition of providing island viewers with outstanding programs,
educational services and dynamic community engagement opportunities for generations of
viewers to come.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/pbs_guam_logo.png,""
KMOS,KMOS,Warrensburg,MO,http://kmos.org/,"","",""
KNBA-FM,Koahnic Broadcast Corporation,Anchorage,AK,http://knba.org/,"<p>Koahnic Broadcast Corporation was created as a non-profit media corporation
in 1992 by Alaska Native leaders to preserve culture and languages, combat widespread
misconceptions and prejudices against Alaska Natives, and create cross-cultural
bridges. Since our creation, Koahnic Broadcast Corporation has been a national
leader in Native American radio broadcasting, media production, and training.</p><p>Koahnic operates KNBA 90.3 FM in Anchorage, Alaska, the first urban Native radio
station, which signed on in October 1996. KNBA broadcasts news, public affairs
and contemporary music to Anchorage and surrounding areas, and streams its signal
online. KNBA also produces special programming, such as annual broadcast coverage
of the Alaska Federation of Natives Convention that is carried by stations across
the state.</p><p>Koahnic is the nation’s primary producer and distributor of Native
public radio programming. Koahnic’s award-winning national radio programs include:
Native America Calling, a weekday one-hour live moderated call-in program; National
Native News, a weekday 5-minute news feature that has been recognized repeatedly
by the Native American Journalists Association; and Earthsongs, a dynamic weekly
feature spotlighting contemporary Native music. </p><p>Starting in 2006, Koahnic has
operated Native Voice One (NV1), the national Native radio program distribution
service. Through NV1 distribution, Native radio programs reach the majority of
the Alaska Native population and the American Indian reservation audience through
carriage by most of the country’s 55 Native-owned stations. NV1 programs are also
heard on public radio stations serving urban areas including Atlanta, Orlando,
Phoenix, and Sacramento, as well as smaller cities like Duluth, Minnesota; Bloomington,
Indiana; Salt Lake City, Utah; and Asheville, North Carolina. </p><p>NV1 station affiliation
includes 400 public radio stations and repeaters, including 50 Native stations
in rural communities. Many more listeners access the NV1 and KNBA webstreams on
mobile devices to hear these shows that are engaging Native America.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/koahnic_logo.png,"<p>National Native News (NNN) - a daily five-minute newscast, has
been the leading daily news service focused on Native issues for 27 years. NNN
is the only news program of this kind produced and anchored entirely by a Native
staff. Broadcast Monday through Friday on more than 300 U.S. and Canadian radio
stations and their translators, NNN is anchored and produced by Antonia Gonzales
(Navajo), with reporters contributing stories from across the country.</p><p>Native
America Calling (NAC) - broadcast live nationwide, is an intense and stimulating
one-hour call-in radio talk show. NAC is produced by Koahnic five days a week
and broadcast via NV1 to stations across the country. There is no other national
forum in any medium for this kind of exchange on Native issues. Native and non-Native
leaders in government, business and the arts recognize this and take advantage
of the opportunity to participate in NAC’s talking circle. Both members of rural
and reservation Native communities and Native people listening from urban areas
may call in and speak directly to people closest to Native issues. Since 1995
NAC has provided links between Native and non-Native people, enabling callers
to speak out on a variety of subjects that educate and enlighten their communities
and other public radio audiences. Hosted by Tara Gatewood (Isleta), the program
is broadcast on nearly 100 Native and public radio stations and translators.</p><p>Earthsongs
- a weekly public radio program produced in Alaska and distributed nationally
via NV1. Since 1999, Earthsongs has been the primary showcase for contemporary
Native American and Indigenous music and culture. Hosted and produced by Alexis
Sallee (Iñupiaq and Mexican-American), the hour-long program is carried by nearly
100 public radio stations across 16 states, and streamed online. Each hour of
Earthsongs features exclusive artist interviews, and a carefully curated mix of
music by both emerging and established Native musicians. </p><p>The Alaska Federation
of Natives (AFN) Convention is the largest representative annual gathering in
the United States of any Native peoples. Each year, the AFN Convention draws between
4,000–5,000 attendees. Policy guidelines and advocacy statements are set by the
dozens of resolutions passed by voting delegates at the Convention. Since 1996,
KNBA has produced and broadcast statewide, gavel-to-gavel coverage of this important
three-day event. The broadcasts are aired on KNBA, streamed online, and made available
to stations across the state. In the last decade, KNBA has added additional coverage
from the event, including daily five-minute newscasts both in English and in Native
languages including Iñupiaq, Athabascan, Tlingit and Yup’ik, and a special hour-long
discussion program, “Alaska’s Native Voice.” KNBA’s live, statewide broadcasts
from the AFN Convention provide an important service to Alaskans, enabling listeners
to stay in touch with important discussions and debates. </p><p>2010 Inuit Nipaat Radio
- Koahnic Broadcast Corporation was the invited United States media provider for
the 2010 General Assembly of the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) in Nuuk, Greenland.
“Nipaat” is a Greenlandic and Iñupiaq word meaning “Sound,” and the broadcast’s
title was chosen to reflect the concept that this special coverage had a distinct
“Inuit Sound” or “Inuit Voice” to speak to Native people throughout the circumpolar
region. Koahnic provided context, detail and analysis throughout the four-day
proceedings with daily broadcasts. As part of the broadcasts, Koahnic produced
five-minute recaps of each day's proceedings in English, Iñupiaq, Yup'ik and Greenlandic.
The program was aired not only by KNBA in Anchorage, but by rural stations serving
communities throughout Alaska including in Dillingham, Nome, Bethel, Chevak, Kotzebue,
Barrow and Sand Point.</p>"
KNME,New Mexico PBS,Albuquerque,NM,http://www.newmexicopbs.org/,"<p>KNME-TV signed on the air in 1958 as the first public “educational”
television station in New Mexico. Licensed to both the University of New Mexico
and Albuquerque Public Schools, KNME-TV is unique in broadcasting with this diverse,
collaborative licensee structure. New Mexico PBS serves the people of New Mexico
by providing engaging local and national content, in-depth news and public affairs,
digital media, education and outreach services, lifelong learning, an interactive
web site, and a celebration of arts and culture.</p><p>As the television industry has
matured and changed so has KNME-TV. Our history of accomplishments includes a
number of groundbreaking television shows like Dr. George Fishbeck’s Science,
Colores!, and New Mexico in Focus. KNME was the first television station in New
Mexico to broadcast a digital signal and to adopt the new digital high-definition
standard on a continuous basis. KNME-TV is one of the most watched public television
stations in the country reaching almost 700,000 households each week with 20,000
members in central and northern New Mexico.</p><p>In 2009, KNMD-TV joined KNME-TV as
a second Public Television service, providing enlightening and entertaining programming
in support of New Mexico’s education systems. This increase in capacity, concurrent
with innovations in on-line delivery of content, and expansion of our satellite
distribution services drove the need for a new umbrella brand, New Mexico PBS.</p><p>New Mexico PBS operates two digital high power transmitters and 33 low-power
translators to provide free over the air viewing to the people of New Mexico.
These transmitters provided greater than 99% reliability during the past year.
New Mexico PBS recently added a new translator to the Shiprock area which serves
the Navajo Nation.</p><p>New Mexico PBS has extensive partnerships throughout the community.
These partnerships include the K-12 community, higher-education, dozens of community
service organizations and more. Our broad reach on-air, on-line and on the ground
comprise an extensive educational and community service organization in New Mexico.
New Mexico PBS’ Ready to Learn Service impacts the lives of thousands of children
in New Mexico presenting over 90 workshops for parents and caregivers and distributing
thousands of books.</p><p>New Mexico PBS provides important local programming to the
citizens of New Mexico. New Mexico PBS productions have won national and regional
awards including a Peabody Award, a national Emmy, and 40 regional Emmys.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/newmexicopbs_logo.png,"<p>Colores! - Our weekly cultural affairs series looks at the inspiration,
challenges, and processes of a wide range of local and national artists, authors,
actors, musicians and more. COLORES! is presented though a collaboration between
new Mexico PBS and the Public Television Major Market Group (MMG), a public television
affinity group. Colores! is funded by The Frederick Hammersley Foundation.</p><p>Public
Square - brings together community leaders and citizens for an impassioned and
informed discussion about some of the biggest issues facing our children today.
Topics included youth mental health, women’s economic empowerment in New Mexico,
transitioning out of foster care, early brain development, impact of domestic
violence on children and access to children’s healthcare. Public Square is funded
by a grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.</p><p>New Mexico In Focus - is New Mexico
PBS’ prime-time weekly news magazine show covering the events, issues, and people
that are shaping life in New Mexico and the Southwest. Hosted by Gene Grant, New
Mexico In Focus provides in-depth coverage of issues and on topics including politics,
health care, drought, economic development and more.</p><p>New Mexico PBS produces
inspiring and informative programs showcasing the beauty, culture and history
of the American Southwest with programs such as Balloon Fiesta, Painting Taos,
The Sandias.</p>"
KOCE/PBS SoCal,PBS SoCal,Costa Mesa,CA,http://www.pbssocal.org/,"<p>PBS SoCal is the primary PBS station for more than 18 million people across six diverse Southern California counties. They provide content and experiences that inspire, inform and entertain - over the air, online, in the community and in the classroom. PBS SoCal is a donor-supported community institution and a content channel of the Public Media Group of Southern California, formed by the 2018 merger of PBS SoCal and KCETLink Media Group.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/pbs_socal_logo.png,"<p>PBS SoCal’s production history under its former name, KOCE-TV, included content about Orange County and California. The archive collection includes the “Orange County History Project,” and a statewide documentary series called “California Dreams.” Public affairs series such as “Jim Cooper’s Orange County” included many local election debates. The assimilation of Southeast Asian immigrants following the Vietnam War was a significant content topic. The collection includes interviews with Pres. Gerald Ford, William F. Buckley, Howard Jarvis and many former Governors and US Senators.</p>"
KOPN-FM - KOPN Community Radio,KOPN-FM,Columbia,MO,http://www.kopn.org/,"","",""
KPCC,KPCC,Pasadena,CA,http://www.scpr.org/,"","",""
KQED,KQED,San Francisco,CA,http://www.kqed.org/,"<p>When KQED went on the air in 1954, it was one of a handful of stations
in a new field referred to as the “educational TV movement.” Conceived initially
as a teaching tool, the station quickly broadened its scope to include entertainment
and public affairs programming. The young station made a name for itself by airing
the famous 1958 Teller-Pauling debate on nuclear fallout as well as controversial
inquiries into homosexuality, racial prejudice and communism. </p><p>KQED originated
the idea of selling memberships, staging an annual auction and developing other
fundraising methods that became widespread throughout the public television system.</p><p>During the 1968 San Francisco newspaper strike, KQED founded Newspaper of the
Air, public television’s first daily news program. Ten years later, KQED, for
the first time, broadcasts a full seven-day schedule with the addition of Saturday
afternoon programming.</p><p>KQED Public Radio became the first station — commercial
or noncommercial — to try an all-news format on FM. On August 12, 1987, the station
changed format from a classical music station that also aired Morning Edition
and All Things Considered to an all news and information station. Two years later,
KQED Public Radio becomes an around-the-clock, in-depth news and public affairs
broadcasting station on July 1. In 1993, it is the most-listened-to public radio
station in the country.</p><p>In January 1995, KQED publicly launched its website featuring
program listings, press releases and content from San Francisco Focus magazine.
And five years later, KQED-TV enters the digital age by broadcasting a high definition
signal and soon launched five new digital channels: KQED HD, KQED Encore, KQED
World, KQED Life and KQED Kids.</p><p>In 2011, KQED Public Radio becomes not only the
most-listened-to public radio station in the nation, but the most-listened-to
radio station in the Bay Area. KQED Public Television defies the national curve
by increasing viewership, which often places it as the most-watched public television
station in America. Usage of KQED's online and mobile services has more than tripled
in the past 18 months -- and that was before the launch of the KQED iPhone app.
With the development of public media's first radio Pledge Free Stream and the
use of social media with thousands of friends and subscribers on Facebook, Twitter
and Interactive blogs, KQED's reach continues to expand. That April, KQED rolls
out an alternative to the classic pledge drive that April. The Pledge-Free Stream
was the first time any public radio station offered members the option of listening
on their computers or smartphones without pledge-break interruptions. </p><p>In December
2012, KQED entered into an innovative partnership with the Knight Foundation to
create Matter Ventures, a startup accelerator and early-stage venture capital
fund that supports and invests in media entrepreneurs working to create a more
informed, connected and empowered society.</p><p>By 2014, KQED Public Television stations
are often the nation’s most watched public television stations in prime time,
and KQED Public Radio is the most-listened-to public radio station in the nation.
Additionally, KQED’s social media has more than 1 million fans across all channels.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kqed_logo.png,""
KRCB,KRCB,Rohnert Park,CA,http://www.krcb.org/,"<p>KRCB first went on the air December 2, 1983, with a broadcast of
the PBS show NOVA. Conceived as ""Public Television for the North Bay,"" KRCB
now broadcasts to much of the San Francisco Bay Area through satellite and cable
television carriage. KRCB's programming can also be seen on K27EE in Ukiah, California,
owned by a local television association. In one of the most crowded areas in the
U.S. for PBS and public broadcasting, KRCB is notable for its coverage of local
news and politics, and for the Emmy and Telly Award-winning, nationally distributed
environmental series, Natural Heroes.</p><p>In order to encourage full participation
in community and society, KRCB, Northern California Public Media provides informational,
educational, and cultural telecommunications services in partnership with our
community. KRCB also engages the community through local initiatives like the
NEA's Big Read, Tengo La Voz - I Have The Voice, and The Best Seat in the House
Festival. Much of the regular programming comes from PBS, American Public Television,
and independent producers. Overnight programming is shared with the national satellite
station Link TV and includes shows such as Mosaic: World News from the Middle
East, while Create is digitally broadcast on KRCB DT2 and NHK is digitally broadcast
on KRCB DT3.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/krcb_logo.png,"<p>KRCB programs include:</p><p>The nationally distributed series Natural Heroes</p><p>The nationally distributed documentary Rebels with a Cause</p><p>A regional series of TV, Radio and web programming “Community Health Connections” that examines
the effects of poverty on health outcomes, tied to economic, racial and geographic
factors. </p>"
KSJN-FM (Minnesota Public Radio),Minnesota Public Radio,St. Paul,MN,http://minnesota.publicradio.org/,"<p>Minnesota Public Radio is one of the nation's premier public radio
stations producing programming for radio, online and live audiences. MPR started
at Saint John’s University where Bill Kling, a student, found the support of Father
Colman Barry, President of Saint John’s, to launch a new college radio station.</p><p>KSJR went on air on January 22, 1967 as a 40,000-watt classical music FM station.
This single station grew into Minnesota Public Radio and a number of other public
media companies, collectively called the American Public Media Group. Today MPR
operates a 44-station radio network serving nearly all of Minnesota and parts
of surrounding states. Reaching 900,000 weekly listeners, MPR and its three regional
services—MPR News, Classical MPR and The Current—produce programming for radio,
online and live audiences.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/mpr_logo.png,"<p>Midday (1967-2012)</p><p>A Prairie Home Companion (1974-present day)</p><p>Pipedreams
(1982-present day)</p><p>MPR News (1967-present day)</p><p>The Splendid Table (1994-present
day)</p><p>Marketplace (1989-present day</p>"
KUCB (Unalaska Community Broadcasting/KIAL),KUCB,Unalaska,AK,http://kucb.org/,"<p>Unalaska Community Broadcasting is a non-profit organization that
has served Unalaska since 1984. We began as a local access television station
and have since developed into a provider of television, radio, a website, and
various social media outlets. We were incorporated in 1984 as a 501(c)3 charitable
organization known at the time as Unalaska Community Television. UCTV broadcast
a low-power television signal to the community of Unalaska over channel 8. Channel
8 Television has been on the air continuously since then. </p><p>Our broadcast service
area is the community of Unalaska and the Port of Dutch Harbor, the hub of the
Aleutian Islands. Since UCB opened its doors in the 1980s, Unalaska has grown
to become the 11th largest community in the state, and Dutch Harbor is one of
the top fishing ports in the nation. Residents turn to our organization for news
and information from a trusted local source. We are the only media organization
based in our region, and these days our reach goes far beyond our island. We
are often called upon by state and national news organizations to cover news or
provide photos and video from the Aleutian Islands, Pribilof Islands, and Alaska
Peninsula. Our website gets thousands of hits a week from individuals all over
the world interested in Western Alaska news and events.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kucb_logo.png,"<p>Channel 8 remains a vibrant part of our organization and we document
nearly every cultural event that takes place in Unalaska. Staff collaborates
with volunteers to create about 10 hours per week of local programming. Highlights
include:</p><p>Flash News - A weekly news program featuring a week’s worth of stories
from the KUCB newsroom.</p><p>Flash Unalaska - A talk show where volunteers review
community events from the prior week and give a preview of upcoming events. Flash
Unalaska has been on the air since at least 1988.</p><p>City Council Coverage</p><p>Frequent
cooking shows and game shows, when participants are available.</p>"
KUED,PBS Utah,Salt Lake City,UT,https://www.pbsutah.org/,"<p>PBS Utah (KUED-TV), licensed to The University of Utah, is the sole PBS member station serving Utah, providing the state with access to quality programs 24 hours a day, on four broadcast channels. PBS Utah provides service to one of the largest geographic areas of any public television station in the country, reaching portions of five states — including all of Utah and parts of Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada, and Arizona — through the use of three broadcast transmitters and a network of over 85 translator relay stations.</p><p>PBS Utah airs national PBS programming in addition to award-winning, locally produced documentaries and series. Recognized as one of the leading public television stations in the country, PBS Utah is committed to serving and engaging with the Utah community through its diverse productions, as well as its educational and outreach programs. PBS Utah is always evolving to provide Utahns with relevant programming and services while maintaining its core values of integrity, fairness, independence, education, and innovation.</p><p>PBS Utah first signed on the air under call letters KUED on January 20, 1958, with an episode of “The Friendly Giant.” Original broadcasts were set up from improvised studios in the basement of the old student union building on The University of Utah campus. The station had humble beginnings, with the use of primitive equipment, a donated transmitter (thanks to a donation from Time-Life Inc., then-owners of KTVT Channel 4, now KTVX) and a $100,000 grant from the Ford Foundation, KUED began broadcasting educational programming for the public in Utah.</p><p>Early programming was purely educational, in some cases consisting of nothing more than a teacher standing in front of a chalk board and lecturing. Nearly half of the programs aired were locally-produced, with the rest coming from National Educational Television (NET) and other distributors. When the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) succeeded NET in 1970, the focus of programming shifted to both education and entertainment.</p><p>In 1993 the station moved to its current location, the Dolores Doré Eccles Broadcast Center. Moving to this new facility allowed KUED to grow and produce additional programming that previously had not been possible.</p><p>KUED was the first station to ever win the Rocky Mountain Emmy Award of Excellence for the Best Overall TV Station, a major recognition of the station's commitment to serve the Utah community.</p><p>Today, PBS Utah provides four digital channels: PBS Utah HD, WORLD, PBS KIDS 24/7, and Create. PBS Utah HD (7.1 or Comcast 658) offers the full PBS schedule in addition to a weekday block of PBS KIDS programming. WORLD (7.2 or Comcast 390) offers PBS documentaries, public affairs, and more. PBS KIDS 24/7 (7.3 or Comcast 391) offers trusted PBS KIDS programming at all hours of the day. Create (7.4 or Comcast 393) offers how-to, travel, cooking programs, and more.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/pbsutah_logo.png,<p>Utah’s World War Two Stories</p><p>Butch Cassidy and the Outlaw Trail</p><p>Return of the Wolves</p><p>Maynard Dixon</p><p>Shadow of Hope</p><p>One Family’s War</p><p>Joe Hill</p><p>Long Walk: Tears of the Navajo</p><p>Wallace Stegner</p><p>Brigham Young</p><p>Christmas with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir</p><p>Martha Hughes Cannon</p><p>Skull Valley: Radioactive Waste and the West</p><p>Let the Women Vote!</p><p>Utah: The Struggle for Statehood</p>
KUHF-FM,KUHF-FM,Houston,TX,http://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/,"","",""
KUNM (aka KNME-FM),KUNM,Albuquerque,NM,http://kunm.org/,"","",""
KUOW Puget Sound Public Radio,KUOW Puget Sound Public Radio,Seattle,WA,http://kuow.org/,"","",""
KUSC-FM,KUSC,Los Angeles,CA,http://www.kusc.org/,"","",""
KUSP-FM,KUSP,Santa Cruz,CA,http://www.kusp.org/,"","",""
KUT Radio,KUT Radio,Austin,TX,http://kut.org/,"<p>KUT was established in 1958 and became a charter member of NPR in
1971, carrying the first-ever broadcast of All Things Considered in May of that
year. KUT also contributed the first of, what would become in time, 14 of the
station’s employees to the NPR staff. In 1979, KUT carried the November inaugural
broadcast of Morning Edition, with Bob Edwards as host and, in doing so, helped
to launch what has become one of the most important and honored public radio programs.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kut_logo.png,"<p>Texas Standard - the national daily news show of Texas.</p><p>The
Austin Music Experience - your weekly source for dynamic live performances, classic
recordings, and music news.</p><p>In Black America - the nationally syndicated radio
series which is heard weekly on close to 20 stations across the country. The weekly
podcast of In Black America, the only nationally broadcast black-oriented public
affairs radio program, is one of KUT’s most popular podcasts.</p><p>Two Guys on Your
Head - Each week Dr. Art Markman and Dr. Bob Duke explore different aspects of
human behavior and the brain.</p>"
KUVO-FM,KUVO,Denver,CO,http://kuvo.org/,"","",""
KVCR,KVCR,San Bernardino,CA,http://kvcr.org/,"","",""
KVIE,KVIE,Sacramento,CA,http://www.kvie.org/,"",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kvie_logo.png,<p>America’s Heartland</p><p>KVIE Arts Showcase</p><p>Rob on the Road</p><p>Studio Sacramento</p><p>ViewFinder</p><p>Yes! We’re Open</p>
KWSO-FM (Warm Springs Community Radio),KWSO,Warm Springs,OR,http://kwso.org/,"<p>The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs (CTWS) is a federally recognized Indian Tribe located in Central Oregon 104 miles south of Portland and 60 miles north of Bend, just off Highway 26. The Warm Springs Reservation consists of 640,000 acres and is home to three (3) tribes, the Warm Springs, Wasco, and Paiute Tribes. KWSO 91.9 FM is a Non-Commercial Community radio station owned and operated by the Tribes and first aired in September 1986. With 4,300 watts of power, and a transmitter atop Eagle Butte, KWSO broadcasts 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. The radio station broadcasts local news and information, cultural programming and music, and reaches 50,000 people in all of Jefferson County and into Wasco, Crook and Deschutes Counties with a primary focus on the residents of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. In 2009 KWSO moved into the Warm Springs Media Center which was funded by the CTWS, Meyer Memorial Trust and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting Community Service Grant Program. This eco-friendly building features a 11.4 kilowatt solar panel array and also houses the Spilyay Tymoo, a community newspaper published by the CTWS. The mission of KWSO radio is to provide Warm Springs with quality radio programming that: delivers local news and information; promotes education, cultural knowledge and language preservation; and increases awareness of social, health and safety issues.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kwso_logo.png,"<p>The Warm Springs Program and Our People and Mother Earth - KWSO
continues ongoing production of these weekly news magazines. </p><p>Talking Drum -
KWSO produced this show for the NV1 network for several years, and formerly produced
“Groove Central Radio.” </p><p>Veterans Day programming- KWSO alters format to honor
veterans with special programming all day on Veteran’s Day, featuring history
of Native American Service and interviews with local Veterans from the past and
present. There is currently 12 hours of locally produced Veteran's Day content.</p><p>We Shall Remain - KWSO produces this <a href=""http://www.prx.org/series/31158-we-shall-remain"">radio hour</a></p>"
KWSU/KTNW (Northwest Public Television),Northwest Public Broadcasting,Pullman,WA,https://www.nwpb.org/,"<p>Northwest Public Broadcasting is a PBS television and NPR radio service licensed to Washington State University. NWPB reaches more than 3.6 million people in 44 counties throughout Washington state and parts of Oregon, Idaho and British Columbia. The television service is comprised of two stations: KWSU in Pullman, WA and KTNW in the Tri-Cities, WA. KWSU originated in 1962 and KTNW in 1987. The radio service provides two services: NPR and Classical Music and NPR News over a network of 18 stations and 14 translators. The radio service originated in 1925 with KWSU-AM.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/nwpb_logo.png,""
KXCI Community Radio,KXCI Community Radio,Tucson,AZ,https://kxci.org/,"","",""
KYUK,KYUK,Bethel,AK,http://kyuk.org/,"<p>KYUK is owned and operated by Bethel Broadcasting, Inc., a Native American run organization that is working to educate, stimulate, and inform; as well as provide cultural enrichment, entertainment, and opportunity for public access; and language maintenance for cultural survival. KYUK first began broadcasting radio to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in 1971, making it the first and oldest Native-owned station in the United States. KYUK television began broadcasting in 1972.</p><p>Many Elder residents in the region are monolingual Yup’ik Speakers, or speak English as a second language. As a result, KYUK is a bilingual station, broadcasting in both English and Yugtun. To make services as valuable as possible, KYUK broadcasts approximately one hour a day of local news in the Yup’ik language, along with an hour and a half of Yup’ik public affairs and talk shows five days a week.</p><p>KYUK radio serves a population of approximately 22,000 predominantly Yup’ik/Cup’ik residents in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region of Southwest Alaska.</p><p>KYUK has been documenting life in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta for nearly 50 years. Going back to 1971, KYUK has been capturing everything from Yup'ik dance to interviews with local Elders. Now KYUK is digitizing our history. With help from our funders, we are in the process of digitizing over 2,000 videos and making them available to the public.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/kyuk_logo.png,""
Library of Congress,Library of Congress,Washington,DC,https://www.loc.gov/,"","",""
Louisiana Public Broadcasting,Louisiana Public Broadcasting,Baton Rouge,LA,http://ladigitalmedia.org/,"<p>On September 6, 1975 at 11:58 a.m., longtime public television advocate
Lucille Woodard flipped a ceremonial switch to sign WLPB on in Baton Rouge. It
was the culmination of three years of hard work after the Legislature approved
the creation of the Louisiana Educational Television Authority. </p><p>Woodard, a professor
at LSU, started working in the 1950s to get educational television throughout
the state. After decades of frustrated efforts, the Louisiana Educational Television
Authority was created in 1971 and the money to start the state network was appropriated.</p><p>KLTM-TV in Monroe was the second LPB station to go on the air in 1976, followed
by KLTS in Shreveport and KLPB in Lafayette in 1978. KLTL in Lake Charles signed
on in 1981 and KLPA-TV in Alexandria went on the air in 1983. LPB has also entered
into a partnership with WLAE-TV32 in New Orleans, which gives LPB a presence in
the Crescent City.</p><p>Louisiana: The State We’re In was started in 1976 with current
Executive Director/CEO Beth Courtney as host and producer. The only statewide
magazine in Louisiana, it has garnered many journalism and public affairs awards
during its 38-year history. </p><p>Our first nationally–syndicated show was Justin
Wilson’s Louisiana Cooking. Our 13th series with Chef John Folse, Hook Lies and
Alibis, premiered in 2015.</p><p>Documentaries about Louisiana and its “unique” politics
have always been a major part of LPB’s locally produced programming. LPB combined
with rising filmmaker Ken Burns (The Civil War) to produce Huey Long. Other award-winning
documentaries produced or co-produced by LPB have included Uncle Earl and Lindy
Boggs: Steel & Velvet.</p><p>The six-part series Louisiana: A History, LPB’s biggest
and most lauded project to date, premiered in September 2003 to coincide with
the 200th anniversary of the Louisiana Purchase. </p><p>Preserving and showcasing our
state’s history has always been a goal for LPB. Documentaries such as Signpost
to Freedom: The 1953 Baton Rouge Bus Boycott and Against the Tide: The Story of
the Cajun People of Louisiana have all explored little-known aspects of our past
and present. </p><p>In the 1990s, LPB produced a wide range of documentaries about
our state’s artists, including Ernest Gaines: Louisiana Stories, Frame After Frame:
The Images of Herman Leonard, and Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening.</p><p>When Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita devastated South Louisiana and New Orleans, LPB documented the
heroic actions of rescuers through Katrina’s Smallest Victims and the stories
of the storm survivors trying to put the lives back together in American Creole
and Washing Away: Losing Louisiana.</p><p>LPB has continued to turn out award-winning
documentaries. In 2012 the network was chosen to create the official documentary
for the state’s 200th anniversary of joining the Union, Louisiana: 200 Years of
Statehood. When a program was needed to kick off the Year of Music in 2013, LPB
joined forces with the Lt. Governor’s Office and Harry Connick, Jr. to create
Sunshine By the Stars: Celebrating Louisiana Music. It featured an all-star lineup
of Louisiana musicians performing their unique versions of one of Louisiana’s
State Songs “You Are My Sunshine.” </p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/lpb_logo.png,"<p>Louisiana: The State We’re In – Louisiana’s only statewide newsmagazine,
now in its 38th season. It started in November 1976, a little over a year after
LPB went on the air. </p><p>A Taste of Louisiana with Chef John Folse – Our longest
running cooking show. It started in 1990. We’ll be airing the 13th season next
year. </p><p>Louisiana: A History – A six-part series produced for the 200th anniversary
of the Louisiana Purchase in 2003. </p><p>Sunshine By The Stars: Celebrating Louisiana’s
Music – We had famous Louisiana musicians cover one of our state songs “You Are
My Sunshine” in their own styles. The song was written by our two-term Governor
Jimmie Davis. </p><p>Alive! In America’s Delta – a six-part wildlife documentary series. </p>"
Maine Public Broadcasting,Maine Public Broadcasting Network,Lewiston,ME,http://mainepublic.org/,"<p>The Maine Public Broadcasting Network is a statewide dual licensee
providing both television and radio service throughout the state of Maine. MPBN’s
television service is also available in the Canadian maritime provinces and Quebec.</p><p>Today’s
MPBN is a result of a 1992 merger between Lewiston, Maine based WCBB and Orono,
Maine based WMEB. </p><p>WCBB TV was founded by Colby College, Bates College and Bowdoin
College and signed on as the first educational television service in Maine on
November 13, 1961. It served the southern and western parts of the state and the
studio was based in Lewiston.</p><p>WMEB TV was founded by the University of Maine
system and first went to air on October 7, 1963. Among its programs was the “Friendly
Giant” and “History with Herb Hake”. In 1964, transmitters are constructed in
Presque Isle and Calais bringing educational television to northern and eastern
Maine. In 1974 another transmitter is built to serve southern Maine. This group
of stations becomes known as the Maine Public Broadcasting Network in 1971. Based
on the University of Maine campus it moves to larger facilities in Bangor in 1987.</p><p>In
1970, MPBN launched WMEH-FM, Maine’s first public radio service.</p><p>WCBB and MPBN
collaborated many times over the years but finally merged to form a single entity
in July of 1992. After several name changes in the ensuing years, MPBN is chosen
to represent both the television and radio services.</p><p>Five television transmitters
and seven radio transmitters form the statewide backbone of the transmission system.
MPBN television provides one HD and three SD channels in its digital broadcast
stream: regular PBS programming with occasional local productions (HD), MPBN Create
(SD), MPBN World (SD) and a fourth channel which is used for seasonal coverage
of the Maine Legislature (SD).</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/mpbn_logo.png,"<p>The News Machine, and its French language counterpart La Machine
Magique - began in 1974. This weekly half-hour was a news program aimed at grade
school students. The French version was added to serve the French Acadian population
of far northern Maine. Both series ran in the mid 1970s.</p><p>La Bonne Aventure -
a 20 episode series devoted to French heritage received national distribution
and acclaim in 1976. In 1979 MPBN broadcast the Maine State High School Basketball
Tournaments. This annual production continues to this day and features 44 live
games from three locations played over the course of 2 weeks each February and
garners some of the highest ratings of the year. </p><p>Maine Watch - launched in 1987.
This weekly public affairs program ran until 2013 and included as one of its hosts
the future Maine Governor and U.S. Senator Angus King. </p><p>Maine Capitol Connection- daily live coverage of Maine’s legislative activities, began on February 6, 2013
and ran for two legislative sessions. </p>"
Maryland Public Television,Maryland Public Television,Owings Mills,MD,http://www.mpt.org/,"<p>In 1966, an act of the Maryland Legislature established the Maryland
Educational-Cultural Television Commission, the governance body of what became
known as the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting and, later, Maryland Public
Television. Ground was broken for a headquarters and studio facility in suburban
Baltimore County’s community of Owings Mills on June 5, 1968, and the center went
on the air on October 5, 1969. The founding executive director, Dr. Frederick
Breitenfeld, Jr., already a leading figure in public broadcasting at the time
of his appointment, served as chief executive for 17 years.</p><p>The center was established
as a nonprofit, state-licensed public television network and member of the Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS). The state license required statewide reach, and so
six towers across the state enabled MPT to get its then-analog signal to all corners
of Maryland and into contiguous states and the District of Columbia. In 1976,
the center initiated its first satellite communications project, linking two universities
in a law school moot court competition some 22,300 miles in space.</p><p>The 1970s
and 1980s saw the introduction of an astounding variety of center-produced historical
dramas, how-to programs, nature, and music offerings in addition to educational
and cultural programming. It was during this time that several MPT series enjoyed
their premieres and what would become decades-long popularity among viewers locally
and nationally. MPT was rewarded for is production prowess with dozens of Emmy®
Awards (four of them national and the remainder regional) along with an impressive
list of other major broadcasting honors.</p><p>In 1984, the name Maryland Center for
Public Broadcasting gave way to Maryland Public Television. In 2004, MPT began
broadcasting in both analog and digital formats until digital-only transmission
started in 2009. In 2007, MPT introduced V-me, a 24-hour Spanish language channel,
which joined MPT’s two other digital channels, the primary MPT-HD and secondary
channel MPT2, in the daily programming lineup. </p><p>MPT has been a pioneer in the
production, delivery and dissemination of pre-K-12 educational resources and online
courses. The award-winning education website Thinkport.org, launched in 2003,
offers high-quality lesson plans, digital media, learning games and resources
for educators, schools, the child care population, and families. </p><p>Another MPT
educational endeavor, started in the late 1960s, came out of the State Department
of Education’s formation of a Division of Instructional Television. ITV, as
it was known, was awarded one-third of the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting’s
available production facilities, staff, and program schedule. By 1980-81 over
42% of Maryland teachers were using instructional television. </p><p>In 1970, College
of the Air debuted, as the center became the largest U.S. producer of telecourses
for credit. Today, via Thinkport, the platform for learning has expanded to embrace
online and mobile technologies, but MPT remains committed to being Maryland’s
sole statewide educator just as it was in the 1970s and ‘80s. </p><p>Starting in 2007,
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting funded MPT to participate in the the American
Archive inventory of public media content. Working on a tight deadline of five
months beginning in late summer and finishing in December 2011, an MPT team worked
3,500 hours and was able to inventory almost 48,000 assets.</p><p>Today, under the
leadership of CEO Larry D. Unger, MPT’s fifth president, some 140 staff members
continue to produce award-winning local and national public television programs,
to provide distinctive online content and community outreach initiatives, and
to offer an impressive array of educational resources for children, teachers,
families, and daycare providers across the state and nationally.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/mpt_logo.png,"<ul>
<li><p>Wall $treet Week With Louis Rukeyser - 1972-2002; highlight was
1987 broadcast from London Stock Exchange to more than 300 U.S. PBS stations</p></li>
<li><p>MotorWeek – 1981-present; television’s longest-running automotive series</p></li>
<li><p>Our Street – groundbreaking
MPT-produced drama focusing on then-described “Negro family life in West Baltimore”</p></li>
<li><p>Crabs – 1984; half-hour comedy special live studio audience, numerous national and international
awards</p></li>
<li><p>Consumer Survival Kit, 1973-79, more than 100 30-minute programs; series
educated consumers; nationally distributed to PBS from 1974-79</p></li>
<li><p>HodgePodge Lodge – 1970-76; 600 30-min. programs, nature series; the first privately underwritten,
MPT-produced program; distributed nationally </p></li>
</ul>"
Media Burn,Media Burn,Chicago,IL,https://mediaburn.org/,"<p>Media Burn Archive is a 501(c)3 nonprofit in Chicago that collects, produces, and distributes documentary video created by artists, activists, and community groups. Their mission is to use archival media to deepen context and encourage critical thought through a social justice lens.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/mediaburn-logoscreen2.png,""
Mississippi Public Broadcasting,Mississippi Public Broadcasting,Jackson,MS,http://www.mpbonline.org/,"<p>Mississippi Public Broadcasting is a trusted multimedia organization that educates, enlightens and entertains Mississippians. As the only statewide radio and television broadcast network, MPB connects Mississippi households and communities.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/mississippi_public_broadcasting_logo.png,""
Mountain Lake PBS (WCFE),Mountain Lake PBS,Plattsburgh,NY,http://mountainlake.org/,"<p>For over 40 years, Mountain Lake PBS has been the public media station for the Adirondacks, Champlain Valley, Montreal and everywhere in between.</p><p>Located in Plattsburgh, NY, Mountain Lake PBS serves a vast audience in New York, Vermont, Quebec and Ontario with acclaimed PBS series such as Antiques Roadshow, Nova and Masterpiece, local productions including Mountain Lake Journal, and highly respected local documentaries like the Emmy Award-winning ARTS IN EXILE: Tibetan Treasures in Small Town America and ON HOME GROUND: Life after Service.</p><p>Mountain Lake PBS provides unique services and events to families and educators throughout the region, focused on early childhood literacy and STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) education, and partners with local organizations to strengthen educational opportunities and access in our region.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/mountain_lake.png,""
Nashville Public Television,Nashville Public Television,Nashville,TN,https://www.wnpt.org/,"<p>Nashville Public Television, Nashville’s PBS station, is available free and over-the-air to nearly 2.4 million people throughout the Middle Tennessee and southern Kentucky viewing area. NPT’s three broadcast channels are NPT, the main channel; secondary channel NPT2; and NPT3, a 24/7 PBS Kids channel. NPT is also available to anyone in the world through its array of NPT digital services, including wnpt.org, YouTube channels and the PBS video app. NPT provides, through the power of traditional television and interactive digital communications, quality educational, cultural and civic experiences that address issues and concerns of the people of the Nashville region, and which thereby help improve the lives of those we serve.</p><p>WNPT, Nashville's independent nonprofit PBS station, is operated by licensee Nashville Public Television, Inc.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/npt_logo.png,""
National Records and Archives Administration,National Records and Archives Administration,Washington,DC,https://www.archives.gov/,"",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/NARA_logo.png,""
New Hampshire Public Radio,New Hampshire Public Radio,Concord,NH,http://nhpr.org/,"","",""
New Hampshire Public Television,New Hampshire Public Television,Durham,NH,http://www.nhptv.org/,"","",""
New Jersey Network,New Jersey Network,Trenton,NJ,http://www.njtvonline.org/,"<p>In 1968, the ""New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority Act of 1968""
established the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority (“NJPBA”) in response
to the perceived lack of coverage by both commercial and public broadcasters of
public affairs in New Jersey. NJPBA was tasked with promoting ""the intellectual,
cultural and civic development of the community by providing a broad range of
programs for all ages."" NJPBA is the FCC licensee of four television broadcast
stations and three television translators, which are operated in concert as a
statewide network. </p><p>Over 40 years of broadcasting, the NJPBA, operating under
the name of New Jersey Public Television and then New Jersey Network, became one
of the nation’s top public broadcasting producers of local content. The network
developed and produced a live nightly news program, NJN News, along with several
award-winning series and specials with a focus on public affairs, covering topics
ranging from politics and the New Jersey Statehouse to education, health and medical
affairs, environmental issues, youth violence, urban affairs, sports, and business
in New Jersey.</p><p>In July 2011, the NJPBA entered into a Programming and Services
Agreement with Public Media, NJ (“PMNJ”), a New Jersey, not-for-profit corporation,
to provide public television programming and services on the network under the
name of NJTV and online at NJTVonline.org. Today, NJPBA works to ensure that PMNJ
continues to provide high-quality, non-commercial programming that serves the
needs and interests of the citizens of New Jersey and furthers NJPBA’s educational
objectives. NJPBA is also the steward of the historically and culturally valuable
NJN program library, which contains an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 media assets
that cover 40,000 to 50,000 hours of material. NJPBA is working toward the goal
of cataloging, preserving, and making the 40 years’ worth of media content created
by NJN available to the public.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/njn_logo.png,"<p>NJN News - A 30-minute daily news program focused on the issues
and events relevant to New Jersey’s citizens. </p><p>On the Record - A 30-minute weekly
program featuring one-on-one interviews with New Jersey newsmakers and lawmakers.</p><p>Reporters Roundtable with Michael Aron - A 30-minute weekly program featuring
reporters discussing New Jersey’s political scene. </p><p>Images/Imagenes - The longest
running Latino community program in the history of PBS, this 30-minute weekly
program focused on cultural events and public affairs in the Hispanic community
and featured the annual special, NJN Hispanic Youth Showcase, which provided scholarships
for some of New Jersey’s finest young Hispanic dancers, musicians, and singers.</p><p>State
of the Arts - A 30-minute weekly program on location with creative personalities
in New Jersey.</p><p>Due Process - A 30-minute weekly program addressing contemporary
legal issues and featuring various legal professionals and experts. </p><p>Another
View - A 30-minute monthly public affairs program focused on New Jersey’s African-American
communities. </p><p>Classroom Close-up, NJ - A 30-minute weekly program featuring
New Jersey’s public school success stories. </p>"
NewsHour Productions,NewsHour Productions,Washington,DC,http://www.pbs.org/newshour/,"<p>With a history spanning five decades, the PBS NewsHour is consistently named the most trusted news program in the country and continues to earn some of journalism’s highest honors. Co-anchored by Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff, the PBS NewsHour continues the journalistic legacy first set forth by Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer – who established the nightly news program’s mission of providing serious, long-form journalism to a nationwide audience. PBS NewsHour reaches millions of viewers on PBS and via a <a href=""http://www.pbs.org/newshour/"">robust website</a>, multiple digital platforms and public radio in select markets. NewsHour Productions LLC is a wholly-owned, non-profit subsidiary of WETA in Washington, DC. In addition to the nightly news program, NewsHour Productions offers an extensive archival footage collection and produces special projects, documentaries and civic forums.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/newshour_logo.png,""
No AAPB Contributor,NOTFOUND!
North Carolina Public Radio - WUNC,WUNC,Chapel Hill,NC,http://wunc.org/,"","",""
OETA - Oklahoma Educational Television Authority,OETA,Oklahoma City,OK,http://www.oeta.tv/home/,"","",""
Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB),Oregon Public Broadcasting,Portland,OR,http://www.opb.org/,"<p>OPB provides essential news, information and entertainment to the Northwest. With public service at the heart of our journalistic mission, we deliver fact-based local, regional and national news coverage daily, along with deep investigative reporting, original OPB series, podcasts and more. </p><p>Powered by the generous support of OPB members, we illuminate the people, places and issues of the region and put stories into context. We engage listeners, viewers, readers and followers across the Northwest to spark conversation, connection and further exploration about what it means to live in this place we call home.</p><p>OPB’s content and programs can be accessed anywhere, at any time on OPB TV, OPB Radio, <a href=""https://www.opb.org"">opb.org</a> and on digital and social media. </p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/opb_logo.png,""
Ozarks Public Broadcasting (KOZK/KOZJ),Ozarks Public Television,Springfield,MO,http://www.optv.org/,"<p>Ozarks Public Television is the Missouri State licensee for KOZK-TV,
channel 21 in Springfield, Missouri and KOZJ-TV, channel 26 in Joplin, Missouri.</p><p>As
a university licensee, KOZK's studios and offices are located on the Missouri
State University campus in Springfield.</p><p>Ozarks Public Television provides PBS
programming and instructional television services to 549,540 households in Southwest
Missouri and the adjoining three state area. OPTV broadcasts 168 hours of programming
per week with a supporting membership of about 6,500 members and over 100 corporate
and institutional underwriters.</p><p>Strong local community commitment, support, and
involvement provides a volunteer staff augmenting station operations in a variety
of tasks. Volunteers provide support in production, administrative, and fundraising
tasks, including operation of two televised auctions.</p><p>KOZJ/channel 26, a ""satellite""
station of KOZK/Springfield, began broadcasting in 1986. Although a Missouri State
licensee, the business office is located in downtown Joplin with transmission
facilities located at KODE, the Joplin ABC affiliate.</p><p>Ozarks Public Television
offices and studios are located in Strong Hall on the Missouri State University
campus in Springfield, Missouri.</p><p>We strive to ensure we capture the history and
heritage that has made the Ozarks a great place to live. Just like everyone else
we are a small staff trying to do a lot of work that informs, educates and entertains
our viewers.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/ozarks_logo.png,"<p>OzarksWatch Video Magazine – The goal of the series is to increase
the knowledge and understanding of the region. The series began in 1999, and we
do approximately 12 to 15 new shows a year. It airs weekly and documents, presents
and preserves the unique heritage of the Ozarks. We have over 210 episodes completed
over the years and they can be seen by going to our website.</p><p>Local Documentaries
– We produced our first local documentary in 2003 entitled, Ozark Jubilee: A
Living Legacy. After that we started doing one new one a year and now we are
producing two local documentaries each year. They have a wide range of topics
and have been a huge success for our station. Again, a list of these productions
are on our website as well. The last two we did this year was Stately Images:
The Public Art of Missouri’s State Capitol (it was a 30 minute program based on
all the art work that is in our state capitol building in Jefferson City, including
many painting by Thomas Hart Benton) and the second program was Links to the Past,
Fairways to the Future (it was a 90 minute documentary that centered around the
history of golf in the Ozarks which dates back over 100 years and went all the way through the
present). We are currently sitting on 17 documentaries (ranging from 30 to
120 minutes in length with two more for 2015 in production).</p><p>Passport to
China – This is a series of 12 programs that we produced to help people become
better acquainted with the people, customs, traditions and language of China.
MSU currently has over 800 students enrolled from China and in return we send
students and faculty members to China. The programs provide insight to the culture
of Chinese people, take people in the Ozarks to places they may have only read
about and show them how much we are alike. It has been a very successful series
and we are currently preparing to do a new series of shows about South America,
Central America, Mexico and Cuba. That series will begin in January of 2016.</p>"
Pacifica Radio Archives,Pacifica Radio Archives,North Hollywood,CA,http://www.pacificaradioarchives.org/,"<p>The Pacifica Foundation, founded by Lewis Hill in 1947, was given
the mission to create a new kind of radio, supported by listeners, owing nothing
to sponsors, providing an outlet for creative expression and a safe haven for
artistic experiments with the radio medium. Predating National Public Radio by
20 years and beginning in 1949 with KPFA-94.1 FM Berkeley, CA, the network added
four stations (WBAI 99.5 FM -NYC, KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles, WPFW 89.3 FM Washington
D.C., and KPFT 90.1 FM Houston, TX.), over the next 28 years. Perhaps best known
as a chronicler of social justice movements and cultural change, the Pacifica
stations also embrace the performing and literary arts, offering sometimes the
only forum for cutting edge and classical arts, and providing a stage to experiment
with radio drama, spoken word, sound sculpture, and the art of radio documentary.</p><p>The
Pacifica Radio Archives were established in 1971, beginning as a repository for
station programmers to deposit taped programs of exceptional historic value, appropriate
for rebroadcast by other stations, or as ""archival source material"" for radio
producers, artists, scholars, and others. The Archives contains over 100,000 program
units, 40,000 of which have descriptive records (available at pacificaradioarchives.org),
18,000 of which have been digitally preserved. The programs date from the advent
of Pacifica Radio in 1949 through the present day, the bulk dated between 1955-1985
on the ¼ inch reel-to-reel format. This audio history documents the last half
of the 20th century and reflects the memory, traditions and evolution
of Pacifica Radio.</p><p>The intellectual content of the collection emphasizes a common
thread of social justice covering cultural, health, historical, political, psychological,
racial, religious, philosophical and social aspects of our society over a variety
of subjects. These include: the McCarthy era, architecture, film history, literature,
music, visual arts and culture, Asian- Americans, Indigenous Peoples of the Americas,
international affairs, Latin America, the Middle East, South Africa, U.S. intelligence,
war, peace, Jews in Europe and the U.S., science and health, women, civil liberties,
civil rights, authors in their own words, economics, media, and science. </p><p>Arts programming
includes radio adaptations of classic plays and other literary works, original
radio dramas, readings of poetry and literature, programs hosted by authors and
poets, radio arts, discussions of literature, poetry, drama, sound sculpture,
and other genres hosted by artists. </p><p>The Archives have been awarded several grants
for the digital preservation and improved description of this important collection
including grants from The Grammy Foundation, The Ford Foundation, The National
Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the California
Audio/Visual Preservation Project, and our largest grant currently in process
from the National Historical Records and Publications Commission.</p><p>The majority
of the collection resides in the temperature and humidity controlled vault at
the Pacifica Radio Archives office in North Hollywood, California. Please contact
us at (800) 735-0230 or visit <a href=""http://pacificaradioarchives.org/contact-us"">http://pacificaradioarchives.org/contact-us</a> for
reference assistance or information about our collection. </p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/pacifica_logo.png,""
PBS Hawaii (KHET),PBS Hawaii,Honolulu,HI,http://www.pbshawaii.org/home/index.php,"<p>Established in 1965 as the State-funded Hawaii Educational Television
Network, providing educational TV for the University of Hawaii, PBS Hawaii then
became the State’s sole member of the Public Broadcasting Service and transitioned
to a 501c(3) nonprofit organization in 2000. PBS Hawaii complements the national
PBS programming with a suite of local shows designed to give voice to Hawaii’s
diverse population.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/pbs_hawaii_logo.png,"<p>Damien - In 1977, PBS Hawaii produced Damien, about a Roman Catholic
priest from Belgium who spent 16 years ministering to people with Hansen’s disease
(leprosy) on Moloka’i. He died from the disease in 1889 and was canonized in 2009.
The program was broadcast on PBS stations across the nation and went on to win
a Peabody award. </p><p>Spectrum Hawaii - Spectrum was a long-running series which
celebrated the rich cultural and artistic life of Hawaii. In its segments are
stories of people who may no longer be with us, and places which may no longer
exist, making the program an archival treasure in and of itself. This is why we
chose Spectrum for the American Archive digitization project.</p><p>Na Mele: Na Lani
Eha - In 2012, for the first time in almost 40 years, television cameras were
allowed inside the nation’s only royal home, Iolani Palace, to capture
performances of music written by Hawaiian royalty performed by some of Hawaii’s
most beloved musicians. The historic, cultural, and musical significance of this
PBS Hawaii special makes it a program that will be cherished for generations to
come.</p><p>HIKI NŌ - Launched in 2011, PBS Hawaii’s award-winning flagship educational
initiative has exceeded expectations. Through HIKI NŌ, PBS Hawaii is 1) helping
Hawaii’s students develop digital media skills, 2) creating a cadre of well-trained
digital media teachers, 3) giving a voice to Hawaii’s youth from communities rarely
covered by the mainstream media, and 4) uncovering a treasure trove of student
stories that would otherwise go unheard. At a national conference of foundations
this month, the head of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation singled out
HIKI NŌ as one of two exciting youth journalism projects in the country. </p>"
Pioneer Public Television,Pioneer PBS,Appleton,MN,http://www.pioneer.org/,"<p>The original incorporation documents of the West Central Minnesota
Educational Television Company were filed in 1959 as part of a plan for a six-state
educational television network to serve the Upper Midwest through a series of
linked microwave towers. Appleton Minnesota was identified by the FCC as a logical
location for a new link in this network because the station could bring television
to this under served rural region and act as a relay point to carry educational
television programming via microwave signal to other stations in the network.</p><p>After
several years of fundraising, the station raised enough federal, state and foundation
support to get started. $22,000 of this support was contributed locally by individuals,
businesses, clubs, associations, and churches from Appleton and dozens of surrounding
communities. Many of these gifts were $1, $2, and $5 donations from individual
families offering what they could afford. The Alvin Lia family donated 8 acres
of farmland to serve as the tower site. School District 2202 donated its old
one-room schoolhouse to hold the television equipment and controls. A 500-foot
tower was erected at the transmission site and on February 7, 1966, KWCM-TV broadcast
its first educational program.</p><p>Early plans called for the station to collect
$30,000 a year in operational funds from area schools. By 1969 however, only
41 schools were paying membership fees. It was clear that a more sustainable
funding model needed to be created. In 1975, KWCM premiered its first locally
developed program. In 1976, PBS and CPB selected Appleton as a site for a satellite
receiving ground terminal, giving the station access to a larger selection of
programs. In 1980 the board and management advanced a vision to become more responsive
to local people through programs that featured the family farms and small towns
of the region. In March 1980, KWCM broadcast its first membership drive. In
a few short years, membership and revenues doubled and soon KWCM had a new home
in Appleton's Old City Hall, which was constructed in 1895 and is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.</p><p>In 1983, the City of Appleton received
a grant to construct a conjoined building for additional KWCM offices and studios.
At that time the station was rebranded to be called Pioneer Public Television
and in 1985, a new 1,200-foot tower was installed at the transmission site. In
October 1996, a second tower tower and transmitter building was constructed in
Chandler, Minnesota and a new sister station, KSMN, began broadcasting. In February
1999, another new Pioneer low power TV signal, K49FA, began broadcasting from
Fergus Falls, completing Pioneer’s broadcast signal expansion.</p><p>In 1996, a new
local program, “Funtime Polka,” premiered. The 1990s also saw the debut of “Prairie
Sportsman.” In 2000, Pioneer produced “Country Spires,” a documentary about rural
churches in the Midwest that was broadcast on public television stations across
the country.</p><p>In 2009 Pioneer began producing “Postcards,” a weekly magazine
program exploring the arts, history and cultural heritage of western Minnesota.
In 2013, Pioneer’s first Upper Midwest Regional Emmy was awarded to “Caroline
Smith: My Way Back Home.” In 2014 Pioneer was awarded an Upper Midwest Emmy for
Haiti Love.</p><p>As a result of the conversion to digital TV, which was completed in
2010, Pioneer now broadcasts four digital channels to a viewing area that reaches
from Detroit Lakes, MN to Rock Rapids, IA. Through Dish Network and DirecTV,
Pioneer’s signal can be viewed from western Wisconsin to the Missouri River. In
2011, Pioneer launched its website <a href=""http://www.pioneer.org"">www.pioneer.org</a> for online streaming of local
programs and PBS content.</p><p>Pioneer is currently advancing plans to construct
a new studio, performance space, and office space for the station. Working in
concert with the City of Appleton, the proposal is to relocate the City’s currently
cramped public library to Pioneer’s existing 1983 office building. In addition,
plans call for a restoration of the historic Opera House so it can once again
serve as an active performance venue and community hub. Finally, the proposal
calls for the construction of a new Pioneer production and office facility (adjacent
to the Old Opera House) that would allow the station to meet the growing need
for meaningful content and digital communications infrastructure in the region.</p><p>From
the “Little Red TV Schoolhouse” to <a href=""http://www.pioneer.org"">www.pioneer.org</a>, the West Central Educational
Television Company has continued to educate and sustain rural communities through
communications services that reflect and uphold local values. Pioneer Public Television
is a rare example of how democratic greater-good principles and small town cooperative
values have been applied to the sophisticated world of broadcast communications.</p>","","<p>Haiti Love</p><p>My Way Back Home: Holly Hansen</p><p>My Way Back Home:
Caroline Smith</p><p>Postcards: Micronesian Culture in Milan</p>"
Prairie Public Broadcasting,Prairie Public Broadcasting,Fargo,ND,http://www.prairiepublic.org/,"<p>What began with a hand-me-down trailer house headquarters and television
transmitter tower on the edge of Fargo, North Dakota, is now a television and
radio network that serves North Dakota, portions of its border states, and several
communities in Manitoba, Canada. In service to households in the region for 50
years, Prairie Public is not showing signs of being over-the-hill. Rather, it
continues to embrace technological advances in the medium while remaining remarkably
close to the same mission it has had from the beginning—to deliver programs that
educate, involve, and inspire, without commercial interruption. </p><p>The organization
was conceived in August of 1959 when a forward-thinking Dr. Ted Donat presided
over the incorporation of the North Central Educational Television Association.
In July of 1963, after nearly four years of planning and development, the first
employee was hired, and North Central Educational Television was about to go live.
The Association’s first station, KFME-TV (Channel 13, Fargo), aired its first
broadcast in January of 1964.</p><p>That first public television signal was an abbreviated
three-hour schedule. Prairie Public’s first local production, an English Literature
course for Moorhead Minnesota’s Concordia College, began in 1965. KFME began broadcasting
in color in 1967, the same year President Johnson signed The Public Broadcasting
Act. </p><p>North Central Educational Television had a growth spurt in the ‘70s, changed
its name to Prairie Public Television, and expanded its broadcast area to include
the entire state of North Dakota. In the ‘80s, radio broadcasts were added, and
the brand has since changed to Prairie Public.</p><p>Prairie Public is proud of its
award-winning television documentaries, including an award-winning series about
the history and culture of the Germans from Russia, a series of documentaries
in collaboration with the Plains CO2 Reduction Partnership led by the University
of North Dakota’s Energy & Environmental Research Center, the nationally broadcast
“Painting with Paulson” art instruction series, and documentaries about Homesteading,
Prairie Churches, the Old Red Trail, Scandinavian Traditions, regional artists
and musicians, and many more.</p><p>Prairie Public has embraced new technology, adding
web content, social media communications and online viewing and listening. The
switch from analogue to digital broadcasting—Prairie Public was the first in the
region to do so—allowed for more great programming for schools, more hours of
non-violent children’s programming for families, and the stunning clarity of high-definition
television. Just as the public adjusted from black and white color back in the
‘60’s, large high-definition televisions have become the norm in most households
as Prairie Public turns 50.</p>",https://s3.amazonaws.com/americanarchive.org/org-logos/prairie_logo.png,""
Public Broadcasting Atlanta,WABE,Atlanta,GA,https://www.wabe.org/,"","",""
Radio Bilingue,Radio Bilingue,Fresno,CA,http://radiobilingue.org/,"","",""
Rocky Mountain PBS (KRMA),Rocky Mountain PBS,Denver,CO,http://www.rmpbs.org/,"<p>KRMA-TV (Rocky Mountain PBS) first went on the air on January 30,
1956, as Denver’s instructional TV station licensed to Denver Public Schools.
As Denver’s first educational station, it broadcast for only two hours that
inaugural day from a temporary studio in the Emily Griffith Opportunity School
in downtown Denver. KRMA was the 5th TV station to go on air in the Denver metro
area and was Denver’s first non-commercial station. It was the 18th educational
television station in the country.</p><p>Records show that as early as 1950, the Denver
Public Schools, Denver Public Library, The University of Denver, the Rocky Mountain
Radio Council of Denver and the Adult Education Council met to discuss educational