tzor wrote: Woodruff wrote:Public Broadcasting is as important to our children's development as a whole as almost anything else, outside of their family environment and school:
You mean "our children's brainwashing." The world has changed radically since the time of President Nixon. Back then most people had access to less than a dozen channels. The notion of educational programming at children in the commerical TV environment was non existant. The only other learning avenue to children at the time was the school system and that was not available to those younger than school age.
Public Brodcasting was important back then. In addition to the education, you also had cooking shows, painting shows, and coverage of local politics. (I strongly doubt that New York State's Capitol would have ever been covered had it not been for "Inside Albany.") Back then you had CONSERVATIVES on Public Broadcasting, including the great William F. Buckley Jr.
Newflash. William F. Buckley would be considered a raving liberal by today's standards, certainly according to many of your arguments. Also, he was incredibly intelligent and critical. Today... that is absolutely not what the right represents.
tzor wrote:But that was then. Mr. Buckley is dead. Mr. Rodgers is dead. Count Count is dead.
Yes, they are dead... and it seems their vision is dying, but why? You wish to claim some great largess and benefit of the market, when in fact, it is the infusion of market economics into PBS that has distorted it.
tzor wrote:And while Big Bird doesn't sell corn flakes, he does pimp himself. Seasmie Street metchandise is huge. Seasmie Street itself is huge,
Big Bird's a one-percenter: Inside Sesame Street's tax returnThe 2011 IRS 990 form for Sesame Workshop (formerly the Children's Television Workshop), the producers of Sesame Street, revealed that they received $7,968,918 in government grants last year. That sounds like a hefty amount, but the 990 also revealed that Sesame Workshop received $44,984,003 in royalties last year, which includes sales of Sesame Street brand merchandise like "Tickle Me Elmo" dolls. That means Big Bird made five times in merchandise sales than what he received in government grants.
An even closer look at Sesame Workshop's finances shows the government funding Romney wants to cut is only a small part of their budget and may not be necessary at all. In 2011, Sesame Workshop received $31,555,192 in grants and donations last year apart from the U.S. government. They also raised over $2 million in additional funds from various fundraising events. In all, Sesame Workshop raised almost $34 million in private funds for Sesame Street, aside from government grants.
One of these things ($8M, $45M, $31M) is not like the other. One of these things just doesn't belong.
I think MOST people who like PBS would be happy to see the market bit eliminated. Unfortunately, folks like you keep protesting against any such government allocations, so for PBS to exist means marketing.
tzor wrote:In addition, Sesame Workshop brought in almost $30 million in revenue from content distribution and media production. In total, Sesame Workshop brought in over $122 million in revenue, not including government grants.
So cry me a river PBS, but isn't the real need for all this money because the workers in Seasme Workshop are actually well paid?
And with more advertising gains come more restrictions on the kinds of things PBS can say and do.. THAT is why the slide, not too much government money, its too much beholding to the markets and corporations.
PBS is one of the few entities that has actually published real criticism of deep hydraulic fracking operations (natural gas extraction), BUT guess who is one of the major supporters of our local PBS station? Range Resources!
tzor wrote:However, salaries still make up a large part of their budget. In 2011, they paid out over $54 million in salaries, a high percentage of their budget for a non-profit.
Now it seems you are trying to change the subject. Maybe they are paid too much, but then.. they have to compete with very much overpaid private company executive salaries.