KCTS 9 said today that it’s merging with Crosscut.com, a nonprofit news and civic-affairs website, as part of the local public broadcasting TV station’s move toward a more digital focus. KCTS will ...
SEATTLE — Local public broadcasting TV station KCTS 9 said Wednesday that it’s merging with Crosscut.com, a nonprofit news and civic affairs website. KCTS will remain a Public Broadcasting Service ...
‘Tis the season of major local media shakeups! This morning, Crosscut editor-in-chief Greg Hanscom announced that his nonprofit online publication will be joining with public television station KCTS 9 ...
KCTS has laid off 11 television production staffers as the Seattle station adopts a digital-first content model. “We are not diminishing our commitment to Channel 9,” President Rob Dunlop said in an ...
SEATTLE (AP) — The president of Seattle's public-television station, KCTS, announced Thursday he will retire in October and that up to a quarter of the staff will be laid off at the financially ...
The video titles sound simplistic to most adults. "There Goes a Dump Truck." "There Goes a Firetruck." "There Goes a Police Car." "There Goes a Rescue Hero." A good number of kids, though, hear about ...
The president and chief executive officer of financially troubled KCTS/9 said yesterday he would retire and that up to a quarter of the station's staff could be laid off by the end of the year as part ...
Help us reach our July goal. Be one of ten people a day giving ten dollars a month. Now is the time to support the best of educational and entertainment programming on KCTS 9. Every day in July it’s ...
Seattle's public television station KCTS said Wednesday that it's merging with two local news websites, including Crosscut.com. Crosscut editor-in-chief Greg Hanscom said Crosscut and KCTS will ...
Editor’s note: We often hear about the impact of the coronavirus pandemic in numbers of cases and deaths. But each data point represents a human life whose loss is felt by countless other people. We ...
As the Seattle Times prepared to reveal mounting debts and mismanagement at KCTS last week, the station laid off 11 production staff and announced that President Burnhill Clark will retire in October.