grey slant background

WGBH Educational Foundation

Boston, Massachusetts

Grants

2023 (3 years)
$500,000

WGBH Educational Foundation (WGBH) is the largest producer of television and web content for the Public Broadcasting System (PBS). It is home to WORLD, a full-service broadcast and online channel, which co-produces and broadcasts independent documentary film, multimedia, and public interest journalism. It broadcasts the original documentary series America ReFramed (co-curated with American Documentary, Inc.), and curates and presents the global and local documentary series Doc World and Local USA. This grant supports WORLD’s new accelerator program for independent documentary filmmakers and the intended outcome is that the U.S. public has greater access to nonfiction multimedia stories about underreported and critical issues facing the country, told from diverse perspectives.

2022 (4 years)
$2,000,000

WGBH Educational Foundation produces some of the most-watched public media programs, including FRONTLINE, the longest running showcase for investigative documentary films on U.S. television. This grant supports FRONTLINE’s operations, enabling it to continue partnerships across the documentary film and journalism field, and to experiment with emerging media formats. The intended outcomes are more investigative and explanatory journalism reaching wide audiences through established and new forms, contributing to more informed audiences and greater public accountability.

2021 (2 years 2 months)
$350,000

WGBH Educational Foundation (WGBH) is the largest producer of television and web content for the Public Broadcasting System (PBS). It is home to WORLD Channel (WORLD), a full-service broadcast and online channel focused on co-producing and broadcasting independent documentary film, multimedia, and public interest journalism programming. It broadcasts the original documentary series America ReFramed (co-curated with American Documentary, Inc.), and curates and presents the global and local documentary series Doc World and Local USA. Through co-production partnerships, WORLD offers film and digital media makers editorial, technical, promotion, and financial support as well as wide dissemination, ranging from film festivals to broadcast, streaming, on-demand, social media, YouTube, and satellite platforms. This grant supports WORLD Channel’s co-production model, enabling it to provide funding and hands-on editorial, distribution, and community engagement support to social issue documentary films created by diverse filmmakers. The outcomes of this project are greater opportunities for independent filmmakers, especially Black, Indigenous, and People of Color filmmakers, to have their nonfiction multimedia storytelling work seen and engaged with by wide and diverse audiences, free of charge.

2020 (2 years)
$1,150,000

FRONTLINE is a production of WBGH Educational Foundation, a Boston-based PBS station that is also the home of NOVA, American Experience, Masterpiece and many other nationally distributed programs. FRONTLINE is an award-winning journalism series that pursues rigorous investigations and deep dives into the most consequential contemporary topics. Available on primetime television, pbs.org, Youtube, social media, and as a podcast, FRONTLINE is a leader in cross-platform distribution of journalism content and an innovator within the public media system. This grant provides general support for FRONTLINE.

2018 (3 years)
$600,000

WGBH Educational Foundation is the single largest producer of television and web content for the Public Broadcasting System (PBS). It houses WORLD Channel (WORLD), a full service broadcast and online channel featuring public television’s signature nonfiction documentary, science and news programming, as well as original content from emerging nonfiction multimedia filmmakers. In seven years of operation, WORLD Channel’s multicast platforms have become a premiere destination for first-run, independently produced documentary and news programming from around the world. WORLD distributes 100 new films each year through three broadcast series: America ReFramed, DocWORLD, and Local USA. This grant supports WORLD to establish direct co-production relationships with documentary filmmakers of color and filmmakers from rural regions, extend editorial support to these makers, and provide support for community engagement work to ensure these films are used to further local conversations about critical social issues. The outcome of this grant will be more nuanced and in-depth nonfiction multimedia stories by underrepresented storytellers reaching both broad and targeted audiences in the United States.

2016 (1 year)
$240,000

As the most-watched history series on television, WGBH’s American Experience has been capturing the public imagination since its debut two decades ago. This award helps to fund an impact campaign for American Experience: Command and Control, a documentary about the high-stakes and near misses in the history of the U.S. nuclear weapons program, which the Foundation also supported. The impact campaign consists of the film’s theatrical release in New York and Los Angeles, including related editing and distribution costs, which qualifies it for major award consideration. The campaign also includes high-profile influencer screenings in the lead up to the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, D.C.

2015 (5 years)
$4,200,000

WGBH Educational Foundation is the single largest producer of television and web content for the Public Broadcasting System (PBS). Since 1983, WGBH Educational Foundation has produced and presented FRONTLINE, a weekly documentary journalism program that provides extensive, in-depth examinations of complex stories not typically found elsewhere on U.S. television. In addition to producing and broadcasting an average of 20 episodes during its regular season, FRONTLINE produces content year-round, on a daily basis, including shorter-form newsmagazine episodes distributed on its website, via podcast, social media, and YouTube. General operating support from the MacArthur Foundation allows FRONTLINE to make critical investments in a digital producing infrastructure that enhances its ability to report across a range of media, while also providing it with flexibility to respond quickly to opportunities and to investigate important issues as they arise.

2014 ( 11 months)
$200,000

WGBH Educational Foundation will produce Command and Control, a documentary directed by Robert Kenner that explores the long-hidden accidents, near misses, technological breakthroughs, and extraordinary heroism connected to America’s nuclear weapons program. Based on the book by Eric Schlosser, Command and Control reveals how the combination of technological complexity and human fallibility has repeatedly escalated the risk of nuclear disaster. The narrative will interweave the story of a 1980 accident at a Titan II missile complex in Arkansas with key events, decisions, and policies over the past seventy years.

2012 (3 years 4 months)
$2,250,000

FRONTLINE is a PBS primetime news documentary series produced and presented by WGBH in Boston. For thirty years, FRONTLINE has provided in-depth and incisive reporting on major news stories as well as groundbreaking investigations of important under-reported issues. FRONTLINE is a core grantee in the media program's news and investigative reporting portfolio. The Foundation funds this set of television, radio, print and satellite news programs to preserve and strengthen journalism that is distinguished by its professionalism, high production values, and strictly noncommercial, nonpartisan, and educational mission. This grant supports FRONTLINE’s television and digital content production activities.

2009 (2 years)
$100,000

In support of FRONTLINE/World reporting on Asian security issues.

2007 (5 years)
$4,578,612

In support of the FRONTLINE and the FRONTLINE/World series, and the expansion of the series' digital and online capabilities (over five years).

2007 (1 year)
$250,000

In support of FRONTLINE/World.

2005 (1 year)
$200,000

In support of "The New Asylums," a FRONTLINE documentary film about the challenges faced by a prison system dealing with large numbers of mentally ill inmates.

2005 (2 years)
$500,000

In support of FRONTLINE/World (over two years).

2004 (3 years)
$1,000,000

In support of the Digital Opportunity Fund (over three years).

2003 (1 year)
$400,000

In support of a two-hour documentary commemorating the ten-year anniversary of the Rwandan genocide.

2003 (1 year)
$100,000

In support of expanded programming to cover war-related stories.

2002 (2 years)
$800,000

To support "FRONTLINE/World," a global news documentary series on PBS (over two years).

2002 ( 11 months)
$350,000

To support the television documentary "World in the Balance."

2001 (1 year)
$500,000

In support of Frontline’s expanded programming in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.

2001 ( 11 months)
$250,000

To support "Reconstruction," a documentary series about the Reconstruction era (1863-1877).

2000 (1 year)
$100,000

To support promotion and outreach activities associated with the PBS series "The War on Drugs."

1999 (1 year)
$50,000

To support "The Decalogue," a documentary series about the moral and ethical choices facing contemporary America.

1998 (1 year)
$600,000

To support a documentary series on drug policy for the television program "Frontline."

1998 (1 year 1 month)
$45,000

To design and implement a model outreach effort as part of the Television Race Initiative.

1997 (1 year)
$50,000

To support outreach activities associated with "The Lost American," a documentary film about the life of relief worker Fred Cuny.

1997 (1 year)
$100,000

To support outreach for "Africans in America," a documentary series about the influence of Africans on the early history of the United States.

1996 (1 year)
$200,000

To produce a documentary about international refugee issues and the work of Fred Cuny, for broadcast on the public television program "Frontline."

1994 (1 year)
$300,000

For "Africans in America," a series exploring the history of Africans in the pre-Civil War United States (over two years).

1990 (1 year)
$100,000

To support "New Television," a series co-produced with WNET.

1989 (1 year)
$200,000

To support educational and outreach activities for the public television series "Degrassi Junior High."

1989 (1 year)
$300,000

To support "The Other Americas," a television series and college-level telecourse on Latin America.

1989 (1 year 1 month)
$250,000

To support the PBS series "Inside Gorbachev's USSR."

1988 (1 year 1 month)
$193,050

To support "The Other Americas," a television series and college-level telecourse on Latin America.

1987 (1 year)
$200,000

To support "The Other Americas," a television series and college-level telecourse on Latin America.

1987 (1 year 1 month)
$400,000

To support a television documentary series on the global environment, "State of the World."

1985 (1 year)
$500,000

To support "The Nuclear Age," a series for public television, in partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University.