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Contrary to what is heard on cable TeeVee and am radio shows, NPR has a diverse audience w/ the caveat being they are generally higher income earners. I'm from the metro D.C. area and this makes sense because 47% of our residents have a bachelors degree or above. The breakdown of political affiliation however is more equally dispersed. They put out an excellent product.
Contrary to Popular Belief, NPR Does NOT Have a Liberal Bias - Intern Edition
I heard the same statistics, mentioned on one of the below, programs a couple of days ago.
As for me I listen to CSpan/"straight from the horses mouth", then turn on a publicly subsidized radio station (WAMU-American University radio) from 9-11 pm for
On Point w/ Tom Ashbrook
WBUR and NPR - On Point with Tom Ashbrook
and
To The Point w/ Warren Olney
To the Point - KCRW
Contrary to Popular Belief, NPR Does NOT Have a Liberal Bias - Intern Edition
The NPR audience has a relatively balanced political outlook, with almost an equal number of people classifying themselves as liberal or conservative. According to 2008 MRI data, the audience divides itself roughly into thirds with 27% reporting themselves as conservative, 26% as middle of the road, and 34% as liberal. (The percentages do not add up to 100%; not all participants answered the question or replied within the parameters reported here). While NPR does have a slight left lean this does not translate into all NPR listeners’ being die-hard liberals.
I heard the same statistics, mentioned on one of the below, programs a couple of days ago.
As for me I listen to CSpan/"straight from the horses mouth", then turn on a publicly subsidized radio station (WAMU-American University radio) from 9-11 pm for
On Point w/ Tom Ashbrook
WBUR and NPR - On Point with Tom Ashbrook
and
To The Point w/ Warren Olney
To the Point - KCRW
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