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Diane DiMassa’s Hothead Paisan is full of unrestrained, devil-may-care attitude. This is an edition of the Books Briefing, ...
For the Michigan-based cartoonist, the story felt like the perfect metaphor for their own experience growing up as a ...
Minecraft Experience London, review: You’re better off giving the kids an iPad for an hour The ramshackle real-world debut of the world-conquering video game has the air of something thrown ...
Hear more from the guest who brought her 1942 DC Comics promotional Superman figure ... Antiques Roadshow is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV ...
Katherine Maher of NPR, at left, and Paula Kerger of PBS are scheduled to testify on Capitol Hill about the federal funding their organizations receive. (StephenVoss/NPR and Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty ...
At the start of Wednesday’s congressional hearing on the funding of public media, a large photo of drag queen Lil Miss Hot Mess appearing on a PBS kids show was displayed behind committee chair Rep.
In the first clip, Lillard's second son, Kalii Laheem Lillard, is seen riding a tricycle while soap bubbles float around him. The child is wearing a helmet while passionately riding his tricycle.
The witnesses at a U.S. House hearing on public broadcasting: NPR CEO Katherine Maher, PBS President Paula Kerger, Mike Gonzalez of the Heritage Foundation and Alaska Public Media President Ed Ulman.
Kerger, the PBS CEO, later responded to Greene's assertion, saying that the drag queen "was not actually on any of our kids' shows." "It was mistakenly put on the website of our New York City ...
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) accused NPR and PBS of turning kids transgender ahead of a subcommittee hearing she is chairing where she will accuse the broadcasters of being “anti-American.” ...
“NPR and PBS have increasingly become radical left-wing echo chambers. For far too long, federal taxpayers have been forced to fund biased news.” “There’s nothing more American than PB ...