New York Life Foundation
With the New York Life Foundation’s generous gift of $585,000, WPSU created a ground-breaking project about grief. Our documentary Speaking Grief has aired on 140 PBS–affiliated stations nationally.
After the death of his husband, Daniel Kane, Darin Jensen (Oakland, CA) is sole-parenting the couple’s three children (from left to right) Jack, Ella, and Max. The photograph is from Speaking Grief, a public media initiative aimed at creating a more grief-aware society developed by WPSU with philanthropic and outreach support provided by New York Life Foundation. speakinggrief.org
Our donors have created endowments to support favorite WPSU-produced TV and FM programming and to bring programs from around the globe to local audiences. They have established named internships for Penn State students at the station and even funded essential equipment to improve our broadcast quality.
With the New York Life Foundation’s generous gift of $585,000, WPSU created a ground-breaking project about grief. Our documentary Speaking Grief has aired on 140 PBS–affiliated stations nationally.
Inspired by more than 40 years of programming on WPSU Penn State, one couple’s $50,000 gift is helping to ensure it will continue to reach the audiences it serves.
Professor’s estate gift supports Morning Edition and Science Friday forever.
“WPSU has been a mainstay for many years for me, and I am pleased to help continue the programs which have been so important to me for so many years.”
Educational pioneer contributes $1 million for new transmitter system. This gift ensures that WPSU’s four television stations continue broadcasting to hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvania households.
Keiko Miwa Ross, Penn State’s 2020 Philanthropist of the Year, has invested an additional $1 million to WPSU building upon her support for the station, including a gift last year to replace the aging WPSU transmitter. The WPSU television studio will bear her name, and she will also be honored in on-air spots.
Press Release »
Estate commitment gives priority to British dramas. The Earl Phillip Grote Programing Endowment will support WPSU-TV with a special emphasis on British dramas.
Donors who create endowments—invested funds of $25,000 or more that provide perpetual support—are recognized via 10-second on-air announcements every year on a special date of their choosing.
Named Endow-a-Day funds and recognition dates:
You can designate a gift to TV, FM, or both or specific kinds of programming, including our digital initiatives, and even to other aspects of station operations, like internships for Penn State students.
Gifts can be funded in many ways – including IRAs, donor advised funds, estate plans, annuities, and trusts, stocks, bonds, and life insurance policies.