What is $17 million, really? – Knight Foundation
Journalism

What is $17 million, really?

The following is cross-posted from NPR.orgPhoto credit: NPR / Stephen Voss.

Today, we announced an inspiring investment in our work: $17 million in grants from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The Wallace Foundation, Ford Foundation and individual philanthropists.

We know, like these organizations and individuals and so many others who donate to public radio know, that this money could go to all sorts of investments. To put today’s announcement in context, here’s what $17 million has bought other investors over the past year or so:

But $17 million in funding to NPR and our Member Stations will fuel all of these projects:

  • A new platform that will better connect you with the NPR and local programming you love, and shape the future of public media journalism. With this investment, NPR and Member Stations will continue to build a cohesive listening experience for news, arts and culture, transforming public radio for the next generation.
  • Expanded coverage of education, and global health and economic development, two areas at the heart of some of the world’s most significant challenges for the future. NPR will build strong, distinctive voices on these topics — offering depth and authority.
  • More Code Switch, the news unit covering race, ethnicity and culture, that brought you theBro-Map. That means more of the thoughtful, sometimes uncomfortable dialogue, about issues touching all of our lives.

While a $17 million donation is considerable, we see it as more than just a number. It’s a stake in our future. It’s an exciting opportunity to appreciate the hands (and mics) that have helped us get where we are today and to really help us build a vibrant public media for the next generation. This means local and national reporting that meets audiences where they are listening, reading, watching, dancing and living. And even more stories that inspire, surprise, delight and perhaps in some cases challenge what you know and what we know.

Perhaps you could even call it a two-for-one match.

Anna Bross, Emily Hellewell and NPR Broadcast Librarian Lauren Sin contributed to this post.