NPR receives $113 million in charitable gifts
Source: NPR
Updated April 16, 2026 12:54 PM ET
NPR has received two of the largest gifts in the public media network's existence, totaling $113 million. They will go toward fueling innovation in NPR's use of digital technology, increasing its connection with audiences, and ensuring the viability of public radio stations after Congress eliminated all federal funding for public media.
NPR President and CEO Katherine Maher said the gifts would help to set up the network and its stations for the next 50 years, beyond the radio network infrastructure that sprang up in 1970 from a coalition of community and university-owned public radio stations across the country.
Maher said that requires NPR and its stations to use tech to collaborate more effectively in providing programs and news coverage, to analyze how people are consuming their offerings and to discern how to raise money more effectively to pay for it. She said the gifts would be "catalytic investments" in NPR's future. "Audiences don't just listen in their cars or in their kitchens," Maher said. "They're reading, they're viewing, they're listening on the go."
The donations would help answer a key question, Maher said: "How do we make sure that we have the infrastructure necessary to be able to deliver the high quality reporting to people in all those places when they want?". The philanthropist Connie Ballmer contributed $80 million specifically toward ensuring NPR transforms its technology to meet the needs and serve the interests of public media audiences on whatever platforms or devices they may seek it.
Read more: https://www.npr.org/2026/04/16/nx-s1-5787634/npr-113-million-charitable-gifts-connie-ballmer
Shellback Squid
(10,105 posts)Bayard
(29,910 posts)Bravo to the donors.
MLWR
(1,056 posts)WizumbODaSage
(39 posts)I like the sound of this. Universities, Scientific Foundations, Information Trusts must follow suit. All of us need to make regular contributions to these efforts!
TheRickles
(3,430 posts)From the NPR article: "Ballmer and her husband, former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, have given away more than $3 billion in recent years, according to a joint interview they gave last year to the Chronicle of Philanthropy.'
Martin68
(27,880 posts)So objective that DUers often complain that they are biased against liberals. They aren't. They just follow standard journalistic rules to give both sides a say, but they always stick to the facts in their editorials. Allowing MAGAts to have their say is essential in letting everybody know how fucked up they are. You've got to give NPR listeners a bit of credit for intelligence, knowledge, and education, and let them come to their own conclusions. I've never been led astray by NPR. I can guarantee you MAGAts never listen to NPR. That's why they've been trying - and succeeding - to defund public broadcasting.
llmart
(17,646 posts)didn't I just read something recently that the GOP slashing of funding to PBS/NPR was struck down?
Aussie105
(8,020 posts)One of our local government funded FTA station, SBS, rebroadcasts a lot of NPR stuff.
Always level headed and informative.