It's not only in Alabama that public broadcasting programs are going dark.
In New Jersey, a 40 year old network has ceased to exist...Governor Christie also sold the network's nine radio licenses. 130 people are out of work.
Public Broadcasting has never been a favorite of Republicans, who now control the NJ and Alabama state governments. The GOP Majority U.S. House tried to strip PBS of its $430-Million earlier in the year, though a TIME blog suggests that battle is over with the funding is intact.
If there was any concerted effort on the part of the Alabama GOP to kill FTR or any other APT programs, I was unaware of it. Legislators of both parties were always willing to take part, and spoke highly of the show, though that's what you would expect when they were talking with the host.
The Montgomery Advertiser's Sebastian Kitchen, always a reliable and knowledgeable guest on the old FTR, wrote about the demise of APT's Montgomery operation in a column in Sunday's paper. He brings out the "death by a thousand cuts" element of the end...the repeated schedule changes to FTR etc etc.
And earlier last week, Dana Beyerle of The New York Times Regional Newspapers added his own reportage to the the developments.
The last locally produced APT program will be recorded in the studios on Madison Avenue on July 15th, Then someone will turn out the lights and lock the doors. More than a dozen Alabamians will be job hunting, and perhaps some viewers will be looking for coverage of what legislators are doing in the Capitol.
[Note: the photos above shows an APT studio on Madison Avenue in February 2009, preparing for the taping of the final FTR. The topic was the faltering Alabama economy.]
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this blog.]
In New Jersey, a 40 year old network has ceased to exist...Governor Christie also sold the network's nine radio licenses. 130 people are out of work.
Public Broadcasting has never been a favorite of Republicans, who now control the NJ and Alabama state governments. The GOP Majority U.S. House tried to strip PBS of its $430-Million earlier in the year, though a TIME blog suggests that battle is over with the funding is intact.
If there was any concerted effort on the part of the Alabama GOP to kill FTR or any other APT programs, I was unaware of it. Legislators of both parties were always willing to take part, and spoke highly of the show, though that's what you would expect when they were talking with the host.
The Montgomery Advertiser's Sebastian Kitchen, always a reliable and knowledgeable guest on the old FTR, wrote about the demise of APT's Montgomery operation in a column in Sunday's paper. He brings out the "death by a thousand cuts" element of the end...the repeated schedule changes to FTR etc etc.
And earlier last week, Dana Beyerle of The New York Times Regional Newspapers added his own reportage to the the developments.
[Note: the photos above shows an APT studio on Madison Avenue in February 2009, preparing for the taping of the final FTR. The topic was the faltering Alabama economy.]
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this blog.]
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