Time To CANCEL Expensive, Fake News like NPR and PBS
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cancel NPR, PBS, they gotta go. And quite frankly, they should have been kicked to the curb a long, long time ago. I just got a list of some of the compensation, some of these people that work for the public broadcasting. Now the president and CEO, 550,000.
Senior host 490,000, senior host 440,000, another host 440,000, another host 430,000, I can go on and on and on. It’s great government work if you can get it. None of these organizations should be around anymore and I don’t want to hear the nonsense about saving Big Bird. All right, Big Bird ain’t going anywhere. Sesame Street will be just fine.
without NPR and PBS, make no bones about it. Somebody will pick it up. Somebody will air it somewhere if people want to watch it. This has been a ruse on the American people for a long time. Obviously, a few years ago, you had the big expose where you had insiders basically talking about the massive liberal bias within these organizations. It goes back further than that. I give you
my experience with NPR PBS, well, PBS in particular. Back in the day, back in the day when television networks gave a damn about the way it looked when they had guests on the program. I would have to go to my, this is when I, again, I was living in Florida. This is, it’s going back 2005 to like, you know, 2012.
I would go on a regular basis whenever I had to do CNN or whatever news network I was on, go to WEDU in Tampa. It’s the big public broadcasting center in Tampa. And you go in there and it’s massive. Massive sound stages, production stages, building.
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and they would have the high-end cameras and backdrops and everything like that when you do guest appearances. Now networks don’t care. Now you got a Zoom camera, you got a mic, good to go. They don’t care. It doesn’t make any difference anymore. It’s amazing. That whole Zoom and COVID thing changed everything. So again, these various different satellite PBS offices, they’re losing revenue on that. Remember, Lavin, most of the sound stage is that
we’re at this PBS place were used by QVC to film infomercials. Other than that.
The whole thing was electronic. Whole thing, beam into shows, put out, so there’s really, you know, few people working there in this massive complex. Another interesting PBS story as well. This is what happens when you go to this back in the day when they had radio rows at political conventions. Of course, NPR would be there. NPR would be there. it would be with all of us, all of us shows that actually
worked in the real world, whether it be Hannity, whether it be Laura Ingram, whether it be Neil Bortz back in the day, we would set up, we would set up Radio Row, everybody have their little booth that was there. And, you know, we’d be setting up our own stuff. Yeah, sure, you had some help there and whatnot. But you know, Neil Bortz was setting up stuff and handling stuff. Then you get the the NPR crowd.
You should have seen their booth. my God, it was staff and water, big water jugs in the back. They had massive screens set up with the clock for the radio show. They needed that much help to put a damn show on. What a production. It was as if, you know, some Hollywood type was doing some $300 million movie. And this was our tax dollars for crying out loud. Enough is enough. mean, go, go.
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When was the last time you watched PBS? Listen to NPR. If any of the shows were worth their weight in anything, somebody would pick them up. Somebody would finance them in some way, shape, matter, or form. Here, you want to save about, you know, 600, I don’t even know who, what is it, 600 million to a billion dollars in finance, at least over the course of the year? Cancel these two.
They have not been a needle mover in decades now. Sorry, I know, I know you’re gonna miss your tote bags, but you’ll live. Watchdogonwallstreet.com.