American Public Television: Difference between revisions

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<u>Background:''' APT was founded in 1961 as the Eastern Educational Television Network (EEN), distributing public TV shows such as ''The French Chef'', ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'', and ''Washington Week'' to public television stations on a regional basis, and then nationwide when NET (now PBS) was formed. They changed their name to Interregional Program Service in the 1980s (though it still used the old name on some shows, such as ''Travels in Europe with Rick Steves'', until 1992), became American Program Service (APS) in 1992, and changed to their current name, American Public Television in 1999. It didn't appear to use a logo until 1970, and then stopped using its own logo for nearly two decades after that.
===Background===
APT was founded in 1961 as the Eastern Educational Television Network (EEN), distributing public TV shows such as ''The French Chef'', ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'', and ''Washington Week'' to public television stations on a regional basis, and then nationwide when NET (now PBS) was formed. They changed their name to Interregional Program Service in the 1980s (though it still used the old name on some shows, such as ''Travels in Europe with Rick Steves'', until 1992), became American Program Service (APS) in 1992, and changed to their current name, American Public Television in 1999. It didn't appear to use a logo until 1970, and then stopped using its own logo for nearly two decades after that.


===1st Logo (1970-1975)===
===1st Logo (1970-1975)===

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