Stephen Colbert Rallies Behind Public Media Groups Facing Major Funding Losses: âItâs Really Critical That These Stations Continueâ
- - Stephen Colbert Rallies Behind Public Media Groups Facing Major Funding Losses: âItâs Really Critical That These Stations Continueâ
Antonio FermeNovember 22, 2025 at 10:32 PM
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Public media is hastily bracing for a future without help from Washington.
In the wake of the Trump administration slashing more than $1.1 billion from public broadcasting, New York Public Radio has turned to private donors to fill the gap. The organization raised $1.7 million on Tuesday night at its Stand With Public Media gala, which honored âThe Late Showâ host Stephen Colbert and his wife, Evelyn McGee Colbert, for their ongoing fight for free speech. Colbert says he hopes this erosion of federal support wonât continue under future administrations.
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âI have no idea whether itâll continue into the future, and I hope it wonât,â Colbert told Variety inside the gala. âSo many people value what public media can give them. In a lot of communities around the United States, public radio is the only local news because local newspapers have failed. It gives people a sense of community, lets them know whatâs happening in and around where they live. And so itâs really critical that these stations continue.â
But organizations like New York Public Radio, according to its president and CEO LaFontaine Oliver, have no choice but to prepare for a scenario where federal appropriations may never return.
âWe have to look for new revenue pathways,â Oliver explained. âWe have to connect to our communities and audiences in different ways. It means weâre looking for institutional funders and philanthropists to ideally step up. Weâll look for ways to monetize the content we produce. This is a time of reinvention for our system. And that spirit of reinvention will serve us, even if federal funding comes back in some slice or portion.â
In some parts of the country, the withdrawal of federal support has taken on urgent stakes. Local leaders in Alaska have described the loss of public media funding as âa life and death issue.â In dozens of remote communities with limited roads and broadband internet access, public radio is often the only conduit for emergency alerts and fast-changing weather conditions. Alaska station owners warn that they may lose 40% to 90% of their funding, and without backup revenue sources, are at risk of going dark.
At the same time, as trust in national and local news declines, surveys show Americans view public media more favorably and credibly when compared to for-profit outlets.
âI think people in the public media space are telling us the facts,â McGee Colbert said. âItâs really hard to go to places now that are unbiased, independent and purely factually-based.â
Colbert and McGee Colbert, self-described public radio loyalists, say they get most of their news from WNYC. âAnd because itâs commercial-free news,â Colbert explained, âyou get a longer exploration of the story. âYou could spend 20 or 30 minutes on a story, rather than 7 minutes. Thatâd be a long time on cable news. And I can also cook while Iâm doing it. I donât have to look at anything.â
Colbertâs appreciation for independent reporting arrives at a complicated time for his own relationship with broadcast television. CBS labeled the sudden cancellation of his late-night show as a âfinancial decision,â but several prominent media voices and organizations â including the Writers Guild of America â have questioned whether the move was connected to Colbertâs on-air criticism of Paramountâs $16 million â60 Minutesâ settlement with President Donald Trump. Earlier this month, Colbert said it was âa reasonable thing to thinkâ his showâs cancellation was a politically motivated decision, but it wasnât âfruitfulâ for him to âengage in that speculation.â
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ