
Not just Big Bird: What to know about the Center for Public Broadcasting and its funding cuts
The organization told staff most positions will end with the fiscal year on September 30. A small transition team will remain until January.
The private nonprofit corporation was founded in 1968 after Congress authorized its formation. It now comes to an end after almost six decades of fueling the production of celebrated educational programming, cultural content, and emergency alerts about natural disasters.
President Donald Trump signed a bill on July 24, canceling about $1.1 billion that had been approved for public broadcasting. The White House claims the public media system is politically biased, and an unnecessary expense, and conservatives have particularly directed their anger at NPR and PBS.
Lawmakers with large rural constituencies voiced concern about what the cuts could mean for some local public stations in their state. They warned that some stations will have to close.
The Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday reinforced the policy change by excluding funding for the corporation for the first time in more than 50 years as part of a broader spending bill.
How it started
Congress passed legislation creating the body in 1967. This came several years after Newton Minow, the then-Federal Communications Commission chair, described commercial television as a 'vast wasteland' and called for programming in the public interest.
The corporation doesn't produce programming, and it doesn't own, operate, or control any public broadcasting stations. The corporation, PBS, and NPR are independent of each other, as are local public television and radio stations.
Rural stations hit hard
Roughly 70 percent of the corporation's money went directly to 330 PBS and 246 NPR stations across the country. The cuts are expected to weigh most heavily on smaller public media outlets away from big cities, and it's likely some won't survive. NPR's president estimated that as many as 80 NPR stations may close in the following year.
Mississippi Public Broadcasting has already decided to eliminate a streaming channel that airs children's programming such as 'Caillou' and 'Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood' 24 hours a day.
Maine 's public media system is looking at a hit of $2.5 million, or about 12 percent of its budget, for the next fiscal year. The state's rural residents rely heavily on public media for weather updates and disaster alerts.
In Kodiak, Alaska, KMXT estimated the cuts would slice 22 percent from its budget. Public radio stations in the sprawling, heavily rural state often provide not just news but alerts about natural disasters like tsunamis, landslides, and volcanic eruptions.
From Big Bird to war documentaries
'Sesame Street' initially aired in 1969. Child viewers, adults, and guest stars alike were instantly hooked. Over the decades, characters from Big Bird to Cookie Monster and Elmo have become household favorites.
Entertainer Carol Burnett appeared on that inaugural episode.
"I would have done anything they wanted me to do,' she said. 'I loved being exposed to all that goodness and humor.'
The New York Times reports 'Sesame Street' will survive without the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. NPR and PBS get a relatively small portion of their annual budget from the corporation, and children's TV programs are produced independently of those organizations.
Still, the NYT reports the cutbacks could affect the availability of those shows, particularly in pockets of the country without widespread access to broadband internet and mobile data.
Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. started the program 'Finding Your Roots' in 2006 under the title 'African American Lives'. He invited prominent Black celebrities and traced their family trees back to slavery. When the paper trail ran out, they would use DNA to see which ethnic group they were from in Africa. Challenged by a viewer to open the show to non-Black celebrities, Gates agreed, and the series was renamed 'Faces of America', which had to be changed again after the name was taken.
The show is PBS's most-watched program on linear TV and the most-streamed non-drama program. Season 10 reached nearly 18 million people across linear and digital platforms and also received its first Emmy nomination.
Grant money from the nonprofit has also funded lesser-known food, history, music, and other shows created by stations across the country.
Documentarian Ken Burns, celebrated for creating the documentaries 'The Civil War', 'Baseball', and 'The Vietnam War', told PBS NewsHour that the corporation accounted for about 20 percent of his films' budgets. He said he would make it up, but projects receiving 50 percent to 75 percent of their funding from the organization won't.
The influence of shows
Children's programming in the 1960s was made up of shows including 'Captain Kangaroo', 'Romper Room', and the violent skirmishes between 'Tom & Jerry'. 'Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood' mostly taught social skills. PBS also aired programs by 'Monty Python' and broadcast shows such as 'Downton Abbey' and 'The French Chef' with Julia Child.
Education professionals and child psychologists designed 'Sesame Street' to help low-income and minority students aged between two and five overcome some of the deficiencies they had when entering school. Social scientists had long noted that white and higher-income kids were often better prepared.
One of the most widely cited studies about the impact of 'Sesame Street' compared households that got access to the show with those who didn't. It found that the children exposed to 'Sesame Street' were 14 percent more likely to be enrolled in the correct grade level for their age at middle and high school.
Over the years, 'Finding Your Roots' showed Natalie Morales discovering she's related to one of the legendary pirates of the Caribbean, and former ' Saturday Night Live' star Andy Samberg finding his biological grandmother and grandfather. It revealed that drag queen RuPaul and Senator Cory Booker are cousins, as are actors Meryl Streep and Eva Longoria.
'The two subliminal messages of 'Finding Your Roots', which are needed more urgently today than ever, is that what has made America great is that we're a nation of immigrants,' said Gates.
'And secondly, at the level of the genome, despite our apparent physical differences, we're 99.99 percent the same.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
10 minutes ago
- The Independent
Sydney Sweeney's controversial jeans ad has a new fan: Donald Trump
Donald Trump has commented on actor Sydney Sweeney 's American Eagle jeans advert, which featured the tagline 'Sydney Sweeney has good genes'. The advert faced criticism from some who accused it of subtly promoting white supremacy and eugenics. The US president said he found the advert 'fantastic' after he was informed that Sweeney is a registered Republican. Public voting records reveal that the Euphoria actress registered as a Republican voter in Florida in June 2024. Watch the video in full above.


Reuters
11 minutes ago
- Reuters
House democrats urge Trump administration to recognise Palestinian state, Axios reports
Aug 4 (Reuters) - More than a dozen House Democrats have signed a letter pressing the Trump administration to recognise a Palestinian state, with at least one lawmaker planning to introduce a pro-statehood resolution, Axios reported on Monday. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.


Telegraph
22 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Nancy Mace: The Maga darling who turned from LGBT ally to proud ‘transphobe'
As far as political makeovers go, few have been as drastic as that of Representative Nancy Mace. A former transgender rights advocate, the Republican representative once called out colleagues for racism and feuded with Donald Trump after blaming him for the Jan 6 Capitol riot. But over the past year, Ms Mace has rebranded herself as an anti-woke crusader. She spearheaded a bathroom ban against the first transgender member of Congress, repeatedly referred to transgender people using the slur 'trannies', and is expected to launch a bid on Monday to become the next South Carolina governor, on a platform to stop the state from going 'woke'. A flurry of sharp-tongued Fox News appearances, combined with regular clips of her more controversial statements going viral, have transformed Ms Mace into one of the most recognisable congresswomen of Mr Trump's second term, sparking outrage and admiration in equal measure across the aisle. Yet one former adviser warned that her metamorphosis may be exposed under the pressures of a gubernatorial campaign. Brendan Donehue, a South Carolina-based political strategist who fired Ms Mace as a client, said: 'As soon as South Carolina voters realise that her record does not match her rhetoric, she's going to be plummeting in the polls.' Ms Mace was approached for comment. The South Carolina representative made headlines in November last year when she introduced a bill to ban transgender people from using women's bathrooms in Congress. Asked by reporters if the bill was designed to target Sarah McBride, the Delaware representative who became the first transgender person elected to Congress, Ms Mace did not mince her words: 'Yes…and then some.' In the days after filing the bill, she capitalised on the attention by posting about bathrooms more than 300 times on X, including a clip in which she held up a sign saying 'biological' outside a women's lavatory on Capitol Hill. I never thought we would need a sign for this, but women's restrooms are for BIOLOGICAL women. Not men. — Rep. Nancy Mace (@RepNancyMace) November 19, 2024 The bill sparked outrage among Democrats, who accused her of bullying Ms McBride, encouraged former staff members to denounce her, and triggered protests, with Ms Mace later pictured wearing a sling after she claimed to have been assaulted by a trans rights campaigner. Unabashed, Ms Mace doubled down on her stance, repeatedly referring to transgender people as 'trannies' – including at a congressional hearing – in an unapologetic effort to stoke controversy, and on Thursday reshared an image of herself superimposed with the caption: 'Most prominent transphobe in American politics.' 'We approve of this message,' she wrote. 'Your mental illness is not our reality.' We approve of this message. Your mental illness is not our reality. — Nancy Mace (@NancyMace) July 31, 2025 The bathroom campaign has positioned her at the centre of the Trump administration's wholesale crackdown on so-called 'gender ideology extremism', helping to cultivate an image of her as a straight-talking new darling of the Right. Yet it marks a sharp departure from her past position, having told the Washington Examiner in 2021: 'I strongly support LGBTQ rights and equality,' adding: 'No one should be discriminated against.' It is not the only issue on which Ms Mace has changed her views. Having briefly served in the state House, in 2020 she became the first Republican woman elected to represent South Carolina in Congress, flipping the 1st District after a single term with a Democratic representative. As a single mother who was unafraid to speak her mind, she seemed exactly like the sort of tough-talking Republican who could lead the GOP beyond Mr Trump. Indeed, she urged lawmakers to 'hold the president accountable' for the Jan 6 Capitol riot and said Mr Trump's legacy had been 'wiped out'. Her harsh words drew the ire of the president, who called Ms Mace 'an absolutely terrible candidate' who has been 'disloyal' to the Republican Party and endorsed her primary challenger when she ran for re-election in 2022. But as the party embraced its former leader ahead of the 2024 election, so too did Ms Mace, who endorsed him in January last year, writing on X that it had been a 'complete s— show since he left the White House'. Ms Mace also earned admiration after speaking up about the sexual abuse she had been subjected to, experiences which she says inform her view on women's only spaces. After being raped as a teenager, Ms Mace dropped out of high school and worked at Waffle House while studying for her diploma. She was the first woman to graduate from the Citadel, a prestigious military academy. In February, in a harrowing hour-long speech on the House floor, she accused her ex-fiance, Patrick Bryant, and his business associates of raping her and other incapacitated women. She also claimed to have found non-consensual pictures and videos of herself and other women naked and engaged in sex acts. The blame for failing to imprison Mr Bryant, she said, lay with South Carolina's top prosecutor, Alan Wilson, who allegedly slow-walked any investigation into the men after she presented him with evidence. Mr Bryant denied the allegations in a comment to AP, while Mr Wilson's office labelled Ms Mace's claims 'categorically false' and said it had not received 'any reports or requests for assistance' regarding the case. In a strange twist, Mr Wilson will be Ms Mace's primary opponent if she enters the gubernatorial race as expected. A recent poll showed Ms Mace leading the pack with 16 per cent of support among Republican voters if she were to enter the race. That puts her one point ahead of Mr Wilson, with Lieutenant governor Pamela Evette, House representative Ralph Norman and State Senator Josh Krimbell sweeping up the remaining votes. Without having launched her campaign, Ms Mace has already declared it a 'two-man race' and engaged in some pre-emptive bashing of her key rival. 'This is a two-man race, if I get in, between me and Alan Wilson, the South Carolina attorney general, who likes to put paedophiles on trial and give them one day in jail serve,' she said. Ms Mace may be the most recognisable face in the race, but Mr Donehue said that the contest remains wide open with more than a year to go until election day. That length of time, he predicted, will give voters a chance to decide which of Ms Mace's personas they believe.