Environment .

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KCPT Celebrates a Golden Milestone

KCPT: Your local guide in 1961...your local guide today.

In today’s television universe of over 500 channels, it’s not unusual for a new network or channel to suddenly appear. Just this year, Oprah Winfrey launched her very own channel. This was not the case 50 years ago. In 1961, as you knelt before the TV console, manually turning the dial, only three of the thirteen clicks revealed pictures and sound.

Imagine what it must have been like when suddenly a fourth click emerged from the TV snow! In Kansas City, it happened on Wednesday, March 29, 1961 when classrooms turned the dial to watch an educational lesson telecast from the Board of Education. Channel 19 was born.

Initial telecasts, from the ultra-modern KCSD television studios in the Board of Education Building at 12th and McGee, were only four and a half hours long. During the day, you might learn from one of 47 different educational lessons. At night, everyone could enjoy a cultural, civic and public service show.

50 years have come and gone since then. A lot has changed, but a lot remains the same.

In 1971, KCSD became KCPT as a community licensed public television station, broadcasting PBS programming in color for the first time.

We moved from the Board of Education building to the old KCTV5 studios on 31st and Grand Avenue. Then, we expanded into the old Allen Press building next door.

Our focus on education has never wavered. Today, we reach 53 districts, 100,000 students and 7000 teachers with educational programs like Learn 360, PowerMediaPlus and Teacher’s Domain.

We’ve gone from 70,000 students on UHF to reaching 2.2 million people with our digital signal.

Instead of channel 19 on the dial, KCPT has three digital channels with round the clock programs that are informative, engaging, heart-wrenching, gut-busting, eye-popping, mind-blowing.

While the viewing possibilities on KCPT have grown in size, number and quality, our mission, our core reason for existence, remains the same. Today, KCPT is a supplement for your children’s education with award winning and non-commercial shows like Sesame Street, Word Girl and Sid the Science Kid. Our programming can broaden your horizons, take you to the heights of mountains, the depths of our oceans and the breadth of our forests. KCPT is where you can discover more about you and your extraordinary potential. And, we are a place to come together with our community — peeking behind the scenes with the KC Symphony, dining and dishing at area restaurants, or analyzing local and national policies. If you look back 50 years, you’ll see we’ve been doing this all along. We hope you’ll be a part of our next fifty years.

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Imagine KC: Creating Sustainable Places

Strategies to develop sustainable corridors and activity centers, and advance new conservation efforts.
Episode 4 airs Thursday, May 5, 2011 at 7:30pm

This episode of Imagine KC will feature the region’s new Creating Sustainable Places” initiative. We’ll hear from HUD Deputy Secretary Ron Sims, who sat down with us for a short interview following his March 24 announcement of the grant, to discuss what this opportunity means from a national perspective. Co-chairs Jan Marcason, City Council, Kansas City, MO, and Curt Skoog, City Council, Overland Park, KS, will talk about how the project will unfold and who’s involved. Local planning and sustainability experts will describe how focusing on strategies to develop sustainable corridors and activity centers, and advance new conservation efforts will result in a region that is more vibrant, connected and green.

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Earth: The Operator’s Manual

Airs Thursday, April 21, 1 & 7pm, KCPT2

An operators’ manual helps keep your car or computer running at peak performance. Earth science can do the same for the planet. In EARTH: THE OPERATORS’ MANUAL, premiering on PBS at 10pm on Sunday April 10th during Earth Month 2011, join geologist Richard Alley as he travels the world, from New Zealand to China, Brazil, Spain and Morocco with stops in New Orleans, Texas and military bases in California. This accurate, understandable and upbeat report on the interconnected stories of humans and fossil fuels, Earth’s climate history and our future energy options will leave you amazed at the beauty and bounty of the planet, inspired by human ingenuity, and optimistic about the future.

Watch the full episode. See more EARTH: The Operators Manual.

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NOVA: Power Surge

Can emerging technology defeat global warming? Airs Wednesday, April 20 at 8pm

Can emerging technology defeat global warming? With more than $30 billion earmarked for “green energy,” President Obama’s stimulus package marks the first serious step by a U.S. administration to tackle the threat of global warming. But as the pace of innovation slackens in the crumbling economy and the public worries more about jobs than the future of the planet, is it all a case of too little, too late? NOVA focuses on the latest and greatest innovations that include everything from artificial trees to cleaner coal, nuclear energy and wildly ambitious — and risky — schemes to re-engineer the entire climate system. Can our technology, which helped create this problem, now solve it? View more information at NOVA:Power Surge.

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