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Non-profit organisation in the USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Koahnic Broadcast Corporation (KBC) is a nonprofit media center that provides Native radio programming through Alaska Native governance and operation.[1] KBC’s radio programming consists of National Native News, Native America Calling, and Indigefi, some of which can be heard nationally through their Native Voice One service. KBC also owns and operates KNBA (90.3 FM) located in Anchorage, Alaska,[2] the first Native radio station in an urban market, and Rising Indigenous Voices Radio (RIVR), an internet radio station streaming modern Native music.[3]
Cook Inlet Region, Inc., a corporation created under the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, was instrumental in developing KBC.[4] KBC was founded in 1996 and is located in Anchorage, Alaska, with a satellite office in Albuquerque, N.M.[2] The word "koahnic" is of Athabascan origin and was chosen for the name of the corporation due to its meaning "live air."[2] KBC is funded in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.[5][6] On June 28, 2010, KBC aired its first international broadcast broadcasting the 11th Inuit Circumpolar Council's General Assembly from Greenland to North America.[7]
The primary mission of KBC is to bring Native voices to Alaska and the nation with its core purpose being to broadcast the Native voice.[2]
KBC's National Training Center, once known as the Indigenous Broadcast Center[5] and founded in 1992, provided training opportunities for Alaska Natives and Native Americans interested in a broadcasting career,[5] on-site workshops, The Alaska Native Youth Media Institute since 1992, and an internship program.[18]
Native Voice One, better known as NV1, is Koahnic's operation distributing radio programming from producers to broadcast stations. It also distributes radio programming directly to listeners via the Internet.
Circa 2000, the service that distributed Native American programming to radio stations via the Public Radio Satellite System was called AIROS. Koahnic relied on AIROS to distribute several of its programs. In 2005, Indian Country Today described AIROS as primarily a distributor and Koahnic primarily a program content provider.[19] Then Koahnic won the contract to use the satellite network, and renamed the service Native Voice One. Koahnic took over the service on July 1, 2006.[20] In 2014, the Smithsonian Institution listed two organizations as operating Native American networks via satellite: Native Voice One and Satélite Radio Bilingüe.[21] The latter serves Spanish language radio listeners in the United States, some of which are Native American.
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