Prairie Public
Public Media OrganizationPrairie Public Broadcasting is committed to respect for the individual and our audience, to lifelong learning, civil discourse, and our regional identity. Those who work at Prairie Public Broadcasting take pride in our programming and our service, expressing it through honesty and accuracy, a strong work ethic, teamwork, workplace diversity, effective stewardship of gifts and talents, and good humor.
Prairie Public Broadcasting offers a window on the world through national and regional television and radio programming; creates a forum for the most important issues facing our region with locally produced, topical programming; partners with others to foster education for all ages; and utilizes digital technology and web services to expand those valued services.
Beginning with a single television transmitter in Fargo, Prairie Public Broadcasting has grown to become the premier broadcaster of public television and radio services throughout the prairie region.
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Wednesday, June 30, 2021 - Part two of “Chinese Adoptees: Not Abandoned or Alone” from journalist Annie Prafcke. This episode is titled “Out of Place.”…
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In 1896, a revision in the North Dakota Century Code allowed that if a town furnished a building to store 100,000 pounds or more of wool for free from…
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Tuesday, June 29, 2021 - Today we begin a three-part series titled “Chinese Adoptees: Not Abandoned or Alone.” Annie Prafcke is a journalist who was born…
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The Greetings Tour is a nationwide mural project that’s been on the road since 2015.
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The Fargo newspaper headlines this week in 1957 concentrated on the devastating tornado that had leveled a large swath of the city only days before. An…
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Actor and historian Joe Wiegand has performed as President Theodore Roosevelt in all 50 states. Now living in Medora, North Dakota, Joe works for the…
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Monday, June 28, 2021 - Dr. Josh Ranum is the vice president of the North Dakota Medical Association. He’s a graduate of UND Medical School and is…
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One of the nation’s deadliest outbreaks of foodborne illness occurred in North Dakota. Just months apart in the early 1930s, there were two separate food…
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Sunday, June 27, 2021 - Humanities scholar Clay Jenkinson joins us to discuss his just-released new book, “The Language of Cottonwoods: Essays on the…
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I don’t know whether it is on account of the nostalgia that oozes from that stanza, or because of my delight in the discovery of a new-to-me prairie…