by Nahlah Abdur-Rahman
November 19, 2025
The lack of federal funding has led to BPM’s public plea to maintain its operations afloat.
Black Public Media is making a public plea for its supporters to “take a stand” in assist of them this upcoming Giving Tuesday.
The nationwide nonprofit, devoted to producing media tasks centered on the Black expertise, is asking those that care about its mission to maintain it afloat on the day to offer again. BPM launched the Giving Tuesday Plea on Nov. 18, because the marketing campaign helps its nationwide plan to proceed telling Black tales.
The cash will go towards BPM’s Black Tales Manufacturing Fund, created within the aftermath of the group’s important loss in federal funding. In July, Congress recalled the $1.8 million granted to BPM for its storytelling operations after pulling again funds to the Company for Public Broadcasting.
Now, BPM hopes to boost $9 million from a mixture of particular person donors, bigger foundations, and companies. Based in 1979, it has spent many years unearthing and spotlighting numerous elements of Black American life and tradition, whereas turning into a pillar of numerous media out there to the general public.

With its existence in jeopardy, the award-winning nonprofit has known as upon its multigenerational viewers to maintain its productions. Its place within the media panorama stays invaluable, as BPM management hopes those that watched its tasks may even chip in to the trigger.
“Public media is for each American, and each American needs to be mirrored in its packages and documentaries,” stated BPM Government Director Leslie Fields-Cruz. “For practically 50 years, Black Public Media has labored to make sure that reality. This 12 months, the general public must take a stand to make sure that Black tales are by no means once more topic to the whims of politics.”
It calls on the general public to donate as little as $5 to its mission to create new tales and guarantee its present slate of movies sees the display screen. BPM has additionally been liable for creating I Am Not Your Negro, Chisholm ’72: Unbought & Unbossed, Ailey, and its upcoming launch, a Barbara Jordan documentary.
With these pivotal narratives on Black figures and histories, BPM has additionally amplified the abilities of Black creatives who developed these tasks. It hopes to proceed these work alternatives for filmmakers and people invested in rising applied sciences, however can’t achieve this with out this public financial assist.
On Giving Tuesday, which takes place Dec. 1, supporters and viewers of Black-led content material are inspired to pour into this vital avenue for the creation and distribution of those tales.
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