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KCET's longtime studios in Los Angeles. On October 5, 1970, KCET became a charter member of the Public Broadcasting Service at the programming service's inception. For most of the next 40 years, it was the second most-watched PBS station in the country and occasionally produced programs distributed to PBS and to individual public television ...
Public broadcaster KCET (which rebranded in January as “PBS SoCal Plus”) is once again the leader in Los Angeles Area Emmys nominations, landing 22 this year (down slightly from last year’s ...
The PBS SoCal/KCET series "Artbound" kicks off its 14th season with a look at the rivalry of two venues, Madame Wong's and the Hong Kong Cafe, in the heyday of L.A. punk and new wave.
Lost LA is a public television historical documentary series that explores Southern California's hidden past through documents, photos, and other rare artifacts from the region's libraries and archives.
KLCS (channel 58) is a tertiary PBS member television station in Los Angeles, California, United States.Owned by the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), it is one of eight television stations in the U.S. that are operated by a local school system.
By January 1995, KCET had opened four units in the Los Angeles metro area. [4] While KCET had conceived of the chain as a way to raise money amid a challenging recession in Southern California, [5] threatened cuts to public broadcasting after Republicans took control of the United States House of Representatives in 1994 spurred additional ...
Loper co-founded KCET, a PBS affiliate in Los Angeles, during the early 1960s as an affiliate of National Educational Television. [3] [1] He was working on his doctorate at the University of Southern California at the time of KCET's launch in 1964. [3] Loper became KCET's first director of education from 1964 to 1966. [3]
The KCET Studios, located at 4401 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, California is the longest continuously-producing studio in Hollywood. [3] Since its establishment in 1912, [1] the studios located at the site have been the home of motion picture producers, including Lubin, Essanay, Willis and Inglis, J.D. Hampton, Charles Ray, Ralph Like, Monogram Pictures, Allied Artists, and ColorVision.