Public Radio and Television in America: A Political HistoryThe origins and evolution of the major insititutions in the United States for noncommercial radio and television are explored in this unique volume. Ralph Engelman examines the politics behind the development of National Public Radio, Radio Pacifica and the Public Broadcasting Service. He traces the changing social forces that converged to launch and shape these institutions from the Second World War to the present day. The book challenges several commonly held beliefs - including that the mass media is simply a manipulative tool - and concludes that public broadcasting has an enormous potential as an emancipatory vehicle. |
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Page 231
... ment established a new body , the Canadian Radio - Television Commission ( CRTC ) , to regulate cable and establish an integrated national broadcasting policy ( Caron & Taylor , 1985 ) . The synergy of video and cable meant that the ...
... ment established a new body , the Canadian Radio - Television Commission ( CRTC ) , to regulate cable and establish an integrated national broadcasting policy ( Caron & Taylor , 1985 ) . The synergy of video and cable meant that the ...
Page 276
A Political History Ralph Engelman. ment and programming owed much to the humanistic vision of William Siemering ... ment , whereas Siemering , preoccupied with the opportunity to put his in- spired programming ideas into practice on ...
A Political History Ralph Engelman. ment and programming owed much to the humanistic vision of William Siemering ... ment , whereas Siemering , preoccupied with the opportunity to put his in- spired programming ideas into practice on ...
Page 293
... ment officials in Canada's war on poverty . The program expanded with the use of new communication technologies for social protest as well as for citizen - government collaboration . The introduction of portable video equip- ment and ...
... ment officials in Canada's war on poverty . The program expanded with the use of new communication technologies for social protest as well as for citizen - government collaboration . The introduction of portable video equip- ment and ...
Contents
Prologue 19141945 | 4 |
The Public Origins of American Broadcasting | 11 |
The Defeat of the Broadcast Reform Movement of the 1930s | 26 |
Copyright | |
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activists administration advertising airwaves Alternate Media Alternate Media Center audience became broadcasting system cable television Carnegie Commission Challenge for Change cited commercial broadcasting community radio community television Congress corporate underwriting coverage CPB board CPB's critical cultural Deep Dish democratic director documentary educational broadcasters educational radio Educational Television established federal film Ford Foundation funding groups Halleck Hill independent producers institutions interest issues KPFA listeners MacNeil/Lehrer member stations movement NACRE NAEB National Public Radio NewsHour Nixon noncommercial broadcasting noncommercial radio noncommercial television NPR's organization Pacifica Radio Pacifica stations participation political potential president public access public affairs programming Public Broadcasting Act public broadcasting system public radio public sphere public television public TV radio and television radio stations Reagan represented role satellite Siemering Siemering's social staff Stoney television system television's tion Washington WBAI World York