PBS’ Frontline Gets CPB Grant

By Alex Weprin 

PBS’ “Frontline” received a two-year, $6 million grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The grant will allow the investigative documentary series to add new multi-story magazine format shows in addition to its in-depth documentaries.

The full release is after the jump.


CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING ANNOUNCES GRANT TO EXPAND PBS’ FRONTLINE

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Award-Winning Investigative Documentary Series to Air on PBS Member

Stations Year Round

David Fanning Receives CPB Ralph Lowell Award for Outstanding Contribution to Public Television

(Austin, TX) – May 18, 2010 – The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) today announced a new grant to expand PBS’ award-winning investigative documentary series FRONTLINE to a year-round broadcast footprint. FRONTLINE will be celebrating its 29th season this fall on PBS.

The announcement was made at the annual PBS membership meeting in Austin, Texas, where CPB also presented FRONTLINE Executive Producer David Fanning with the Ralph Lowell Award for Outstanding Contribution to Public Television. The award is named after the late Boston philanthropist and founder of WGBH, where FRONTLINE is produced, and is among the highest recognitions in public media. Earlier recipients of the Lowell Award include Ken Burns, Julia Child, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Alistair Cooke and Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer, among others.

The $6 million two-year grant to expand FRONTLINE will allow the series to add new multi-story magazine-format programs to each season, providing FRONTLINE producers with greater capacity to provide in-depth coverage of domestic and international stories, as well as social and cultural issues. The expanded FRONTLINE schedule on PBS will also feature “fast turnaround” news reports and timely investigative stories.

The new expanded FRONTLINE will build on and increase its partnerships with journalism schools and public media institutions like the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, ProPublica, the Center for Investigative Reporting, and American University’s Investigative Reporting Workshop, among others. These partnerships will enhance FRONTLINE’s investigative reporting resources and expand the series’ ability to develop a digital-age generation of younger and more diverse reporters, doing innovative work both online and for broadcast.

“Quality journalism has never been more important. This grant to FRONTLINE will advance an investigative news service that will work across multiple platforms to expand its reach and service to the American people,” said Pat Harrison, the President and CEO of CPB. “FRONTLINE continues to be a resource for stations and for educators, providing information and a thorough reporting on a wide-range of topics.”

“At a time when journalism is facing widespread cutbacks and reductions, when network news divisions are laying off hundreds of broadcast journalists and producers, when fewer significant news programs are being produced, we’re extremely grateful to CPB for its support of FRONTLINE’s expansion plans,” said David Fanning. “It’s a testament to the series, its long history, and its place in American journalism.”

“FRONTLINE is a paragon of American journalism and investigative reporting,” said PBS President and CEO Paula A. Kerger. “PBS and its member stations transport citizens to wherever news happens, whether it’s onto the battlefields of Iraq or into the obscure corridors of power. We are deeply proud that PBS has been the home of FRONTLINE for 28 seasons. During that time, FRONTLINE has helped burnish public media’s reputation for independent, courageous journalism. We look forward to extending the series through the summer.”

Vivian Schiller, President and CEO of NPR, said, “FRONTLINE shines a light on some of the most complex and controversial issues of our times, and we at NPR are great admirers of their deep and incisive approach. FRONTLINE’s year around presence further reinforces public broadcasting as the most important provider of independent in-depth reporting on television, radio and online.”

This is the second major journalism grant announced by CPB this year. In March, Ms. Harrison announced a new Local Journalism Centers initiative to support in-depth reporting in markets across the country. The $10.5 million initiative will allow regional public radio and television stations to report on issues of critical importance in these regions and to share this content across a Public Media Platform for national and local broadcast and online.

“CPB is committed to independent, unbiased journalism and believes that public media can help fill a critical hole in the country at this time,” Ms. Harrison said. “We have an obligation to ensure that in-depth international, national and local journalism thrives in the United States. It is critical to the health of our democracy.”

About CPB

CPB is a private, nonprofit corporation created by Congress in 1967 and is steward of the federal government’s investment in public broadcasting. It helps support the operations of more than 1,100 locally-owned and –operated public television and radio stations nationwide, and is the largest single source of funding for research, technology, and program development for public radio, television and related online services.

About FRONTLINE

Since 1983, FRONTLINE has served as PBS’ flagship public affairs series. The series has garnered every major journalism and broadcasting award, including 42 Emmy Awards, 25 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Journalism Awards (including three Gold Batons), 13 George Foster Peabody Awards, 11 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Awards, eight Television Critics Association Awards, seven Banff Television Festival Awards and two Edward R. Murrow Awards. On the Web, FRONTLINE streams an archive of over 90 full-length documentaries and hundreds of companion Web sites and online-only reports.

About PBS

PBS, with its nearly 360 member stations, offers all Americans – from every walk of life – the opportunity to explore new ideas and new worlds through television and online content. Each month, PBS reaches more than 118 million people through television and nearly 21 million people online, inviting them to experience the worlds of science, history, nature and public affairs; to hear diverse viewpoints; and to take front row seats to world-class drama and performances. PBS’ broad array of programs has been consistently honored by the industry’s most coveted award competitions. Teachers of children from pre-K through 12th grade turn to PBS for digital content and services that help bring classroom lessons to life. PBS’ premier children’s TV programming and its Web site, pbskids.org, are parents’ and teachers’ most trusted partners in inspiring and nurturing curiosity and love of learning in children. More information about PBS is available at www.pbs.org, one of the leading dot-org Web sites on the Internet.

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