In a cost-cutting move, Seattle’s KCTS is taking over operations of KYVE, the public TV station in Yakima that it has owned for more than a decade. Most of KYVE’s staff will lose their jobs, but ...
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'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 ...
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 ...
The KCTS Board responded to public and staff outcries over the troubled leadership of longtime President Burnhill Clark by moving quickly to replace him with an outside interim c.e.o. Friends of the ...
'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 ...
Richard “Dick” Warsinske, who has been local PBS station KCTS-TV’s general manager and vice president of operations for the past 15 months, is no longer with the station, KCTS spokeswoman Karen Fujii ...
Two Seattle-based non-profits are joining forces in an effort to create a new media entity that the organizations say will spark an “exciting new chapter” for regional news in the Pacific Northwest.
The rumor was going around that The Seattle Times was preparing a major takedown of KCTS and its president, Burnill Clark. This was after the Seattle Weekly‘s own expos頯f the station’s deep problems, ...
Last month, public television stations across the country held their annual December pledge drives. The station that raised the most money? Recently troubled KCTS-TV in Seattle, reaping $2.2 million.