Anyone who has visited the US - or listens to ABC News Radio - will know National Public Radio [NPR] as the only beacon of "decent" radio in an otherwise landscape of dross.
NPR, an equivalent to the BBC and our ABC, has over the years taken a stand on issues and highlighted matters politicians would prefer it not to - and like the ABC in Australia attracted criticism from politicians and subsequent cuts in funding from the US Federal Government. The broadcaster has even got close to simply running out of money.
Now comes news that the widow of Ray Kroc, the founder of McDonalds, has in her will left the "tidy" sum of US$230 million to NPR. Read an article from the New York Times on what this great bequest will mean to the broadcaster.
NPR, an equivalent to the BBC and our ABC, has over the years taken a stand on issues and highlighted matters politicians would prefer it not to - and like the ABC in Australia attracted criticism from politicians and subsequent cuts in funding from the US Federal Government. The broadcaster has even got close to simply running out of money.
Now comes news that the widow of Ray Kroc, the founder of McDonalds, has in her will left the "tidy" sum of US$230 million to NPR. Read an article from the New York Times on what this great bequest will mean to the broadcaster.
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