
Pundits have justifiably decried the loss of local
newspapers -- 2,500 have shuttered since 2005, as employment in that field has decreased by 70% and revenues by 60%.
But there is a replacement hiding in plain sight: public media,
according to the Growing Strength of Public Media Local Journalism, a study written by Elizabeth Hansen Shapiro, Mark Fuerst and Caroline Porter for the Wyncote Foundation, from which the above
numbers are derived.
NPR estimated it had 53 million audience members in fall 2021, a slight decline from 60 million during the start of the pandemic and the 2020 presidential
election, but still higher than 2016 and 2019.
Part of the reason is that news-focused public radio licensees have been investing in news as their revenues have grown.
An
analysis of 123 licensees found that those outlets spent $640.2 million on content production in fiscal year 2020. When everything was included, that figure rose to $712.4 million—69% of total
revenues.
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In contrast, these licensees spent a combined $202.4 million on fundraising in fiscal year 2020, representing 19% of revenues. Yet they enjoyed robust contributions from
supporters.
The public broadcasting system is viewed as weak because it snares less public funding than systems in other countries. And it is more decentralized that those in other Western
democracies.
Despite that, public media has a vast footprint within the U.S. media system, they add.
The Center for Public Broadcasting (CPB) provides service grants to
“394 ‘qualified radio organizations’ (sometimes referred to as ‘licensees’ or ‘grantees)’ that control 1,190 public radio stations, and to 158
“qualified TV organizations” that control 356 public television stations. Combined, the system’s signals reach 99% of the U.S. population, including those in both rural and urban
locales.
And much of the content is news-based.
“The most sophisticated public radio stations (and a few sophisticated public television stations) now have large
multi-platform newsrooms with an array of local media products,” the authors continue. “These media organizations, like WFAE in Charlotte and WBUR in Boston, are building on a foundation
of local news broadcast formats which are, in some cases, decades old."
Their programming ranges from local news call-in shows to local newscasts to local news magazines patterned on offerings
like "The PBS Newshour."
Another strength of public media is that it can be consumed while commuting.
“In May 2022, NPR-affiliated stations were the No. 1 news stations
during morning and/or evening drive times in 31 of the top 50 media markets, based on Average Quarter Hour (AQH; or the number of people listening within a 15-minute period) among those ages 25 to
54,” the study continues.
Furthermore, it adds, “NPR-affiliated stations were the No. 1 news stations during morning and/or evening drive times in the top 10 media
markets.” And programs like "All Things Considered" and "Morning Edition" topped Sean Hannity’s audience.