The
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS)
is an American
non-profit public
broadcasting television service with 354 member TV stations in the United States which hold
collective ownership. However, its operations are largely
funded by the
Corporation for Public
Broadcasting.
Its headquarters are in Arlington,
Virginia
.
PBS is the most prominent provider of programming to U.S. public
television stations, distributing series such as
The NewsHour with Jim
Lehrer,
Masterpiece, and
Frontline. Since the mid-2000s,
Roper polls commissioned by PBS have
consistently placed the service as America's most trusted national
institution. However, PBS is not responsible for all programming
carried on public TV stations; in fact, stations usually receive a
large portion of their content (including most
pledge drive specials) from third-party
sources, such as
American
Public Television,
NETA,
and independent producers. This distinction is a frequent source of
viewer confusion.
PBS also has a
subsidiary called
National Datacast (NDI), which offers
datacasting services via member
stations. This helps PBS and its affiliates earn extra
revenue.
Overview

PBS logo (October 4, 1971 to September
30, 1984)
PBS was
founded on October 5, 1970, at which time it took over many of the
functions of its predecessor, National Educational
Television (NET), which later merged with station WNDT Newark,
New Jersey to form WNET
. In
1973, it merged with
Educational Television
Stations.
Unlike the model of America's commercial television networks, in
which affiliates give up portions of their local advertising
airtime in exchange for network programming, PBS member stations
pay substantial fees for the shows acquired and distributed by the
national organization.
This relationship means that PBS member stations have greater
latitude in local scheduling than their commercial counterparts.
Scheduling of PBS-distributed series may vary greatly from market
to market. This can be a source of tension as stations seek to
preserve their localism and PBS strives to market a consistent
national line-up. However, PBS has a policy of "common carriage"
requiring most stations to clear the national prime time programs
on a common schedule, so that they can be more effectively marketed
on a national basis.
Unlike its radio counterpart,
National Public Radio, PBS has no
central program production arm or news department. All of the
programming carried by PBS, whether news, documentary, or
entertainment, is created by (or in most cases produced under
contract with) other parties, such as individual member stations.
WGBH
in Boston
is one of the largest producers of educational
programming. News programs are produced by WETA-TV
in Washington,
D.C.
, WNET
in New York
and WPBT
in Miami
. The Charlie Rose interview show,
Secrets of the Dead,
NOW on PBS, Nature, Cyberchase, and The NewsHour with Jim
Lehrer come from or through WNET
in New
York. Once a program is offered to and accepted by PBS for
distribution, PBS (and not the member station that supplied the
program) retains exclusive rights for rebroadcasts during the
period for which such rights were granted; the suppliers do
maintain the right to sell the program in non-broadcast media such
as
DVDs, books, and sometimes PBS
licensed merchandise (but sometimes grant such
ancillary rights as well to PBS).
PBS stations are commonly operated by
non-profit organizations, state agencies, local
authorities (e.g., municipal boards of education), or
universities in their community of license. In
some states, PBS stations throughout the entire state may be
organized into a single regional "subnetwork" (e.g.,
Alabama Public Television). Unlike
public broadcasters in most other countries, PBS does not own any
of the stations that broadcast its programming. (i.e., there are no
PBS O&Os anywhere in the country) This is partly due to the
origins of the PBS stations themselves, and partly due to
historical license issues.
In the modern broadcast marketplace, this organizational structure
is considered outmoded by some media critics. A common
restructuring proposal is to reorganize the network so that each
state would have one PBS affiliate which would broadcast
state-wide. However, this proposal is controversial, as it would
reduce local community input into PBS programming, especially
considering how PBS stations are significantly more
community-oriented, according to the argument, than their
commercial counterparts.
In 1994, the
Chronicle of
Philanthropy, an industry publication, released the results of
the largest study of charitable and non-profit organization
popularity and credibility conducted by
Nye
Lavalle & Associates. The study showed that PBS was ranked
as the 11th "most popular charity/non-profit in America from over
100 charities researched with 38.2% of Americans over the age of 12
choosing Love and Like A Lot for PBS.
"Viewers Like You"
On programs where viewers of PBS contributed to the production
costs, the phrase "
Viewers Like You" is used to
indicate PBS's gratitude to the contributors. The phrase appears in
the list of
underwriters at the start
and end of all PBS programs with viewer contributions. The phrase
was coined on October 2, 1989. Previously, donations by viewers of
PBS members were recognized as contributions from "this station and
other public television stations" or "public television
stations".
From 1989 to 1999, the underwriting announcement, accompanied by a
slide with either "Public Television Viewers" or "Viewers Like
You", was similar to "This program was made possible by the
(annual) financial support of (PBS) Viewers Like You". The "Viewers
Like You" statement was usually, but not necessarily always, the
last part of this announcement, usually preceded by a reference to
the
Corporation for
Public Broadcasting ("a private corporation funded by the
American people") and to one or more other foundations or corporate
sponsors. Starting November 1, 1999, the PBS underwriting
guidelines required all announcements to say "This program was made
possible by contributions to your PBS station from Viewers Like
You. Thank You!"
Some programs have chosen their own announcements:
Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood: "The people who give the money to make
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood are the people of this and other public
television stations, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and
The Sears-Roebuck Foundation";
Sesame
Street (1991–1998): "Funding for this program is provided
in part by the
Corporation for Public
Broadcasting... and by public television stations and their
contributors." Some programs, such as
Learn to Read, and
Dragon Tales do not get funding from the
stations or "Viewers Like You", only receiving funds from the
Corporation for
Public Broadcasting and/or other donors.
In July
2009, flagship PBS station WQED
in Pittsburgh
announced plans to move the "Viewers Like You"
credit to the front of the donor list, in order to give home
viewers more recognition. The following month, PBS announced
similar plans nationally. The move is being done because both the
national PBS system and PBS member stations discovered that having
"Viewers Like You" at the end of the donor list had the
unintended consequence of leaving
viewers feel left out, despite the fact that viewers were the top
contributor to PBS programming.
Programming
Primetime
- Fine arts (Great Performances, Live from the Met, Live from Lincoln Center, and
Evening at Pops)
- Drama (Mystery!, American Playhouse, and Masterpiece Theatre)
- Science (Nova and Scientific American
Frontiers)
- History (American Experience)
- History Detectives
- Public affairs
(Frontline,
NOW on PBS, Wide Angle,The Newshour with Jim
Lehrer, Nightly
Business Report)
- Independent films (P.O.V., and Independent Lens)
Daytime/children
PBS Kids has also imported British
children's series (for example,
Tots
TV,
Teletubbies,
Boohbah, and
Thomas the Tank Engine and
Animalia) as well as children's
shows from Canada (i.e.,
The Big
Comfy Couch,
Theodore
Tugboat,
Wimzie's
House and
Polka Dot
Door). On June 4, 2007, their first imported Australian
children's TV series debuted on PBS –
Raggs. Some of the programs
subsequently moved to commercial television (for example,
Ghostwriter, and
The Magic School
Bus).
However, PBS is not the only distributor of public television
programming to the member stations. Other distributors have emerged
from the roots of the old companies that had loosely held regional
public television stations in the 1960s.
Boston
-based American Public Television
(former names include Eastern Educational Network and American
Program Service) is second only to PBS for distributing programs to
U.S. non-commercial stations. Another distributor is
NETA (formerly SECA), whose properties have
included
The Shapies and
Jerry Yarnell
School of Fine Art. In addition, the member stations
themselves also produce a variety of local shows, some of which
subsequently receive national distribution through PBS or the other
distributors.
PBS stations are known for rebroadcasting British television
costume dramas and
comedies (acquired from the
BBC
and other sources); consequently, it has been joked that PBS means
"Primarily British Series". However, a significant amount of
sharing takes place.
The BBC and other media outlets in the region
such as Channel 4 often cooperate with PBS
stations, producing material that is shown on both sides of the
Atlantic
. Less frequently, Canadian, Australian, and
other international programming appears on PBS stations (such as
The Red Green Show,
currently distributed by syndicator Executive Program Services);
the public broadcasting syndicators are more likely to offer this
programming to the U.S. public stations. It also uses the new
slogan "On" then the station name.PBS is also known for
re-broadcasting British
science
fiction and
comedy programs such as
Doctor Who and
Red Dwarf, and
Monty Python's Flying
Circus and
The Benny Hill
Show.
Contributing stations
Stations and/or networks that have produced or presented
PBS-distributed programming include:
- KAET
, Tempe,
Arizona
- KUAT-TV
, Tucson,
Arizona
- KETS, Little Rock,
Arkansas

- KCET
, Los Angeles
, California
- KVIE
, Sacramento,
California
- KPBS
, San Diego
, California
- KQED
, San Francisco
, California
- KTEH
, San Jose,
California
- KHET
, Honolulu,
Hawaii
, PBS
Hawaii
- Rocky Mountain
PBS, Colorado

- Connecticut Public
Television
- WHYY-TV
, Wilmington, Delaware
- WETA-TV
, Washington,
D.C.
- WDSC-TV
, Daytona Beach, Florida
- WUFT
, Gainesville,
Florida
- WPBT
, Miami
, Florida
- WMFE-TV
, Orlando,
Florida
- WEDU
, Tampa,
Florida
- WTTW
and
WYCC
, Chicago,
Illinois
- WTIU
, Bloomington,
Indiana
- WYIN
, Gary, Indiana
- WFYI
, Indianapolis
, Indiana
- Kentucky Educational
Television
- WYES-TV
, New
Orleans
, Louisiana
- Maine Public
Broadcasting Network
- Maryland Public
Television
- WGBH-TV
, Boston
, Massachusetts
- WTVS
, Detroit
, Michigan
- Twin Cities Public Television
, Saint Paul, Minnesota
- Mississippi Public
Broadcasting
- KETC
, St. Louis,
Missouri
- Nebraska
Educational Telecommunications
- New Hampshire Public
Television
- WNET
, Newark, New
Jersey
- New Jersey Network

- WMHT-TV
, Albany,
New York
- WSKG-TV
, Binghamton, New York
- WNED-TV
, Buffalo, New York
- WLIW
, Garden City,
New York
- WCFE-TV
Mountain Lake PBS, Plattsburgh, New York
- WXXI-TV
, Rochester, New York
- WCNY-TV
, Syracuse, New York
- WTVI
, Charlotte,
North Carolina
- Prairie Public Broadcasting,
Fargo, North
Dakota

- UNC-TV
- WCET-TV
, Cincinnati, Ohio
- WVIZ
, Cleveland,
Ohio
- WOSU-TV
, Columbus,
Ohio
- WGTE-TV
, Toledo,
Ohio
- Oklahoma
Educational Television Authority
- Oregon Public
Broadcasting
- WQLN
, Erie,
Pennsylvania
- WITF-TV
, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
- WQED
, Pittsburgh
, Pennsylvania
- South Carolina
Educational Television
- WKNO
, Memphis,
Tennessee
- KLRU
, Austin,
Texas
- KERA-TV
, Dallas
, Texas
- KUHT
, Houston
, Texas
- KTXT-TV
, Lubbock, Texas
- Vermont Public
Television
- KCTS-TV
, Seattle
, Washington
- WMVS
and
WMVT
-Milwaukee
Public Television, Wisconsin
- Wisconsin Public
Television
Criticism and controversy
PBS has been the subject of some controversy.
Federal and state funding
Historically, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting has received
15% to 20% of its annual operating revenue from Federal sources and
25% to 29% from State and local taxes. This has caused ongoing
controversy and debate since the CPB was created on November 7,
1967 when U.S. president
Lyndon B.
Johnson signed the
Public Broadcasting Act of
1967.
Public need
PBS was founded to provide diversity in programming at a time when
all television was
broadcast over the
public airwaves by only 3 privately-owned national networks (as
opposed to today's private
cable or
satellite delivery services with a
multitude of programming sources). There is debate as to whether or
not the PBS system has outlived its public necessity. Public
television proponents maintain that the original mandate to provide
universal access, particularly to rural viewers and those who
cannot afford to pay for the private television services, remains
vital. In addition, they argue that PBS provides some types of
critical programming which would not be shown at all on the
commercial networks and channels, including extensive educational
children's programming, scientific exposition, in-depth
documentaries and investigative journalism.
On-the-air fundraising
Since 53% to 60% of public television's revenues come from private
membership donations and grants, most stations solicit individual
donations by methods including
pledge
drives or
telethons which can disrupt
regularly scheduled programming. Some viewers find this a source of
annoyance since normal programming is often replaced with specials
aimed at a wider audience to solicit new members and donations.
This has been parodied many times on other television shows such as
The Simpsons (see
Missionary: Impossible).
Political/ideological bias
- The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 required a "strict
adherence to objectivity and balance in all programs or series of
programs of a controversial nature". It also prohibited the federal
government from interfering or controlling what is broadcast.
- In at least one instance (a 1982 broadcast of the USIA programme Let Poland be Poland about the
martial law declared in Poland in 1981), Congress has expressly
encouraged PBS to abandon its conventional position of non-partisan
neutrality. The programme, a protest against the
imposition of martial law by a Soviet-backed
régime, contained commentary from many well-known
celebrities. While widely viewed in the U.S., it met with
skepticism on the part of European broadcasters due to concerns
that the show, "provocative and anticommunist," was intended as
propaganda.
- Kenneth Tomlinson, former
chairman of the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting resigned in November 2005 after a report sharply
criticized Tomlinson for the way he used CPB resources to "go
after" perceived liberal bias at PBS, including directing funding
towards conservative-written programming, secretly hiring an
outside consultant to monitor the Now with Bill Moyers program, and
hiring White House employees to form an ombudsman office to
"promote balance in programming".
- Kenneth Tomlinson, who took
over at CPB in 2003, began his tenure by asking for Karl Rove's assistance in overturning a regulation
that half the CPB board have practical experience in radio or
television. Later he appointed an outside consultant to monitor the
regular PBS program NOW with Bill
Moyers. Told that the show had "liberal" leanings,
Moyers eventually resigned in 2005 after
more than three decades as a PBS regular, citing political pressure
to alter the content of his program and saying Tomlinson had
mounted a "vendetta" against him. Moyers eventually returned to
host Bill Moyers
Journal, after Tomlinson resigned. Subsequently, PBS made
room for conservative commentator Tucker
Carlson, formerly of MSNBC and co-host of
CNN's Crossfire, and Journal Editorial Report with
Paul Gigot, an editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page
(this show has since moved to Fox News
Channel). On November 3, 2005 CPB announced the resignation of
Tomlinson amid investigations of improper financial dealings with
consultants.
PBS networks
| Network |
Notes |
|
| PBS YOU |
began 1998; ended January, 2006 |
| PBS KIDS |
began September 15, 1993 |
| PBS KIDS Sprout |
began May 9, 2005 |
| PBS World |
began in 2006; nationwide launch August 15, 2007 |
| PBS-HD |
HDTV feed to member
stations |
| PBS Satellite Service |
24-hour alternate network that provides a mixed variety of
programming selected from PBS's regular network service, as well as
for carriage on packaged satellite providers |
| Create |
began in 2007 has shows on painting, cooking, traveling, and
home improvement. |
PBS has also
spun-off a number of
TV networks, often in partnership with other
media companies:
PBS YOU (ended January
2006, and largely succeeded by
American Public Television's
Create),
PBS KIDS (ended October 1, 2005),
PBS KIDS Sprout,
PBS
World (commenced August 15, 2007), and
PBS-DT2 (a feed of
HDTV and
letterboxed programming for digitally equipped
member stations), along with packages of PBS programs that are
similar to local stations' programming, the
PBS Satellite Service feeds.
PBS Kids Go! was promised for October 2006, but
PBS announced in July that they would not be going forward with it
as an independent network feed (as opposed to the pre-existing
two-hour week daily block on PBS).
Some or all are available on many
digital
cable systems, on
free-to-air TV via
communications satellites,
as well as via
direct
broadcast satellite. With the transition to terrestrial
digital television broadcasts,
many are also often now available as "multiplexed" channels on some
local stations' standard-definition digital signals, while DT2 is
found among the HD signals. PBS Kids announced that they will have
an early-morning Miss Lori and Hooper block with four PBS Kids
shows usually around 08:00. With the absence of
advertising, network identification on these PBS
networks were limited to utilization at the end of the program,
which includes the standard series of
bumpers from the "Be More" campaign.
Regional networks
While various
digital subchannels
are operated on a regional or statewide basis, these are the
creation of individual PBS member stations or groups of stations.
While not operated or controlled by the national PBS organization,
these extra channels typically rebroadcast portions of the
programming from the main PBS service in addition to local and
regional public-affairs coverage and are carried as subchannels of
existing PBS stations.
Also
carried on some PBS stations are Create (American Public Television,
how-to programming), MHz Worldview
(Commonwealth Public
Broadcasting, international news) and V-me
(WNET
, Spanish language
educational). None of these services form part of the main
PBS network.
PBS Kids
Founded
in 1993, PBS Kids is the brand for children's programming aired by PBS
in the United
States
. The PBS Kids network, which was established
in 1988 and ran for seven years, was largely funded by
DirecTV. The channel ceased operation on
October 1,
2005, in favor of a
new joint commercial venture,
PBS KIDS Sprout.
PBS sports
The network has shown some sporting events in its history.
During the 1970s and 1980s PBS was the leading American
tennis broadcaster.
Bud
Collins and
Donald Dell were PBS
announcers. PBS was the first American network to regularly
broadcast tennis tournaments. PBS also broadcast "Tennis for the
Future", hosted by
Vic Braden.
In 1982, PBS and
ESPN provided the first
thorough American television coverage of the
FIFA World Cup. PBS aired same day highlights
of the top game of the day.
Toby
Charles was PBS' play by play announcer.
From 1984 to 1987, PBS broadcast
Ivy
League football.
Dick Galiette and
Upton Bell called games for the first
season and
Marty Glickman and
Bob Casciola called the games in 1985.
In 1986, PBS increased its coverage and had two announcing teams,
Brian Dowling
and
Sean McDonough, who had been the
sideline reporter for the prior two seasons were the play by play
announcers and Bob Casciola and
Len
Simonian were the color analysts. For the final season
McDonough and
Jack Corrigan were the
game announcers and Mike Madden was the sideline reporter.
Another PBS Sports series was "The Sporting Life", an interview
series hosted by
Jim Palmer. The Sporting
Life premiered in 1985 and was canceled soon after.
Many state public broadcasting stations, such as Georgia Public
Broadcasting, Maine Public Broadcasting Network, and Nebraska
Educational Television, broadcast
high
school sports
championships, and
college sports games not seen on commercial TV (such as baseball,
gymnastics, tennis, etc.).
See also
References
- The Charities Americans Like Most And Least, The Chronicle of
Philanthropy, December 13, 1996
- Charity begins with health, Concern over diseases cited; Karen
S. Peterson; 20 December 1994; USA Today; FINAL Page 01D
- Survey helps firms choose charities; Laura Castaneda; 13
December 1994; The Dallas Morning News; HOME FINAL Page 1D
- Interview with Lavalle 9/7/09
- http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09205/985984-67.stm
- http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09217/988558-51.stm
-
http://www.cpb.org/stations/reports/revenue/2005PublicBroadcastingRevenue.pdf
- Joel Stein
- Let Poland Be Poland (1982, TV) on IMDB
- US Public Diplomacy in Hungary: Past and
Present, Edward Eichler, April 25, 2008
- Republican Chairman Exerts Pressure on PBS,
Alleging Biases
- Associated Press. "Education
chief rips PBS for gay character: Network won't distribute episode
with animated 'Buster' visiting Vt.," MSNBC, January 26,
2005.
- Paul Farhi (April 22, 2005). PBS Scrutiny Raises Political Antennas.
The Washington Post
- http://www.lyngsat.com/amc21.html
- NewspaperARCHIVE.com - Search old newspaper
articles online
- Janson Media: Consulting: Consultants
- OCRegister.com - Sports Stats and
information
- Penn Football Tapes 1980-1989
- Jim Palmer
Further reading
- B.J. Bullert, Public Television: Politics and the Battle
over Documentary Film, Rutgers Univ Press 1997
- Barry Dornfeld, Producing Public Television, Producing
Public Culture, Princeton University Press 1998
- Ralph Engelman, Public Radio and Television in America: A
Political History, Sage Publications 1996
- James Ledbetter, Made Possible by: The Death of Public
Broadcasting in the United States, Verso 1998
External links