National Plutocrat Radio
National Plutocrat Radio
Corporate One-Percenters dominate NPR affiliates' boards
By Aldo Guerrero
Jul 02 2015
For a public radio service, NPR is notoriously known for its lack of diversity within its staff, audience and guests invited onto their showsproblems that NPR has itself acknowledged (6/30/14).
A new FAIR study finds that NPRs diversity problem also extends into the board of trustees of its most popular member stations: Two out of three board members are male, and nearly three out of four are non-Latino whites. Fully three out of every four trustees of the top NPR affiliates belong to the corporate elite.
FAIR studied the governing boards of the eight most-listened-to NPR affiliate stations, based on Arbitron ratings (Cision, 2/13/13). The stations and their broadcast regions are KQED (San Francisco), WAMU (Washington, DC), WNYC (New York City), KPCC (Los Angeles), WHYY (Philadelphia), WBUR (Boston), WABE (Atlanta) and WBEZ (Chicago). (Two top-rated public stations, KUSC in Los Angeles and WETA in Arlington, Va., were not included in the study because they mainly play classical music rather than having a news/talk format.) Board members were coded by occupation, ethnicity and gender.
Out of the 259 total board members, 194or 75 percenthave corporate backgrounds. Many of these board members are executives in banks, investment firms, consulting companies and corporate law firms. Some of the elite corporations include Verizon, Bank of America and Citigroup.
More:
http://fair.org/home/national-plutocrat-radio/
Wellstone ruled
(34,661 posts)Squelching any and all descent.
imthevicar
(811 posts)When Allen Keys was given a Platform to spew, Without rebuttal all his lies and hate.
burrowowl
(17,652 posts)Counter Spin on NPR. NPR's new sucks but there are still some good programs for example Living on Earth and this Way Out.