The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has formally dissolved after nearly 60 years. This comes after a formal vote in January, after the corporation was stripped of federal funding. In a statement ...
For a while, AI was trained in comfortable conditions with clean data, predictable inputs and time to process and refine that data. In sports, especially in the live sports broadcasting space, AI has ...
If an organization cannot survive without federal funding, it isn’t really private. This truth is lost on the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which saw its taxpayer funding eliminated by Congress ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s board of directors voted to dissolve the organization, officials announced Monday, ending the 58-year-old agency that distributed federal funds to NPR, PBS ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) board has voted to dissolve the organization after 58 years. This decision follows the elimination of all federal funding for the CPB by Congress. CPB ...
Congress clawed back more than $1 billion in funding for the corporation in July after President Donald Trump said neither NPR nor PBS "presents a fair, accurate or unbiased portrayal" of news. The ...
WASHINGTON — The Corporation for Public Broadcasting — which helped fund NPR, PBS and many local radio and TV stations — is officially shutting down, months after Congress passed spending cuts that ...
The Oscars telecast will move from broadcasting to streaming in 2029, switching from ABC to YouTube — a watershed moment for the entertainment business. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences ...
A local broadcasting company is adding another channel to its lineup in a multi-million dollar move. Circle City Broadcasting, the parent company of local broadcast stations WISH-TV and MyINDY-TV 23, ...
Michael J. Socolow does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
Jimmy Kimmel returned to ABC this week. Sort of. About a quarter of ABC’s usual audience couldn’t see the talk show host this week after two major owners of ABC affiliates, Sinclair and Nexstar, ...