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Federal funding for public broadcasting is uncertain after President Donald Trump signed an executive order blocking federal support to PBS and NPR.
President Trump signed an executive order cutting federal funding for PBS and NPR. Here’s why I can’t be objective.
Today's face of public broadcasting isn't Big Bird or Elmo—it's Katherine Maher, NPR's outspokenly progressive CEO.
Sound Off is an opinion forum for Mercury readers to offer brief comments on today’s news. Submissions must be 75 words or ...
President Donald Trump has fought plenty of political heavyweights, but now he's up against a foe far tougher than Hillary Clinton or Kamala Harris: Big Bird.
The termination of the federal grant program, called Ready To Learn, resulted in a loss of $23 million that would have gone ...
A new children’s TV show, "Navajo Highways," follows a Navajo child, a puppet named Sadie, from the city who decides she ...
It is impossible to even imagine Democrats allowing a conservative media organization to be backed by taxpayer funds for 55 years.
In addition to its ongoing month-long festival of Star Wars movies, the Utah Theatre here will also be busy during May ...
Slump? What slump? Bryce Harper opens up Sunday's series finale with an opposite field home run in the first, his sixth of ...
NPR CEO Katherine Maher and PBS CEO Paula Kerger spoke with Margaret Brennan on Face the Nation Sunday saying they are both looking at legal options after President Donald Trump last week signed an ...
PBS CEO Paula Kerger said new children’s programming will “skid to a halt” if the government moves ahead with President Trump ...
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