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National Public Radio is quitting Twitter after the social media platform owned by Elon Musk stamped NPRâs main account with labels the news organization says are meant to undermine its credibility.
âNPRâs organizational accounts will no longer be active on Twitter because the platform is taking actions that undermine our credibility by falsely implying that we are not editorially independent,â NPR said in a statement Wednesday.
Last week, Twitter labeled NPRâs main account as âstate-affiliated mediaâ on the social media site, a label also used to identify media outlets that are controlled or heavily influenced by authoritarian governments. Twitter later changed the label to âgovernment-funded mediaâ and gave it to at least one other public news organization, the BBC.
âWe are not putting our journalism on platforms that have demonstrated an interest in undermining our credibility and the publicâs understanding of our editorial independence,â NPRâs statement said.
The Public Broadcasting Service said Wednesday it has also stopped tweeting from its main account because of its new label and has no plans to resume. PBS said: âWe are continuing to monitor the ever-changing situation closely.â
NPRâs main account had not tweeted since April 4. On Wednesday, it sent a series of tweets listing other places to find its journalism.
The company said NPR journalists, employees and member stations can decide on their own if they want to keep using the platform.
NPRâs chief communications officer, Isabel Lara, said in an email that âNPR journalists and employees will decide on their own if they wish to remain on the platform, same for NPR member stations as theyâre independently owned and operated.â
NPR does receive U.S. government funding through grants from federal agencies and departments, along with the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The company said it accounts for less than 1% of NPRâs annual operating budget.
Twitterâs new labels have often appeared arbitrarily assigned. It tagged NPR with the âstate-affiliatedâ label after Musk participated in a public conversation about NPR on Twitter, and then deleted mention of NPR, but left up BBC, on a web page where it described why they should not get that label.
Since then, it has given NPR, BBC and some other groups a âgovernment-fundedâ label but hasnât done the same for many other public media outlets, such as their counterparts in Canada and Australia.
In an interview Tuesday with a BBC technology reporter at Twitterâs San Francisco headquarters, Musk acknowledged that the British news organization âis not thrilledâ about the state-affiliated labels and asked the reporter for feedback.
âOur goal was simply to be as truthful and accurate as possible,â Musk said. âSo I think weâre adjusting the label to be âpublicly funded,â which I think is perhaps not too objectionable. Weâre trying to be accurate.â
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Trina probably wasnât the first person people thought of when it comes to a Tiny Desk Concert (that in itself is a problem), but she delivered anyway. The Miami rapper kicked a medley of her hits over funky instrumentation and her performance has been getting praise ever since.
Things started on a somber note with Trina performing âMama,â which is a dedication to her mother who unfortunately passed away from cancer in 2019. From there, the vibes picked up as Da Baddest B*tch performed her hits like âDa Baddes B*tch,â her smash collab with Trick Daddy âNann N*ggaâ and âSingle Again,â among more.
Of course, there are some haters on social media questioning why Trina was tappedâand they are quickly getting packed up for their tomfoolery. For the record, anyone with an issue with Trina is the Op. Those are the rules.
Twitter has been celebrating Trinaâs turn on Tiny Desk Concert noting how sheâs a blueprint for a lot of todayâs female rappers like Megan Thee Stallion, Cardi B and yes, even Nicki Minaj. Peep some the more passionate praise in the gallery.
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13. Trina NPR Tiny Desk
Source:NPR
Trina NPR Tiny Desk trina npr tiny desk

Legendary lawyer Don Passman has likened the music biz and its transformation in the digital era to a Rubikâs Cube. It shifts so much that there have now been 10 editions of his industry bible, âAll You Need to Know About the Music Business.â
The industryâs challenges, however, did not deter the lay economists at NPRâs Planet Money podcast after they heard an old song called âInflation.â The funky, moody track with lyrics like âInflation is in our nation⌠I can see a depression coming onâ was written in 1975 when inflation was at levels slightly higher than today. A cassette tape of the song by Earnest Jacksonâs Sugar Daddy and the Gumbo Roux showed up in Planet Money hosts Sarah Gonzalez and Erika Berasâ mailbox one day, and they âgot a little obsessedâ â so obsessed they embarked on an 8-month effort to start a record label and publish the song.
Gonzales and Beras discuss the challenges of creating a label, striking deals with different stakeholders and promoting the never-before-published song over two episodes of the podcast, this week.
Describing their reporting to Billboard, Gonzalez and Beras say that in the course of creating a contract that split revenue between the label and musicians, they came up with what Passman describes as âpossibly the worst record deal Iâve ever seen, from a record company point of view.â (Passman was interviewed for the podcast.)
âWe are not doing this to make money. We are really doing this because we want to explain the music industry,â Gonzalez says. âItâs just really difficult to make money in this industry, which we all knew. But itâs not until you get into it that you really understand it.â
If a typical deal gives 80% of revenues generated by a song to the record label and 20% to the musicians, Planet Money proposed giving 80% to the musician, namely singer and songwriter Earnest Jackson, and keeping 20% for their label. The hosts felt that was a fair deal given that even if the song was streamed 1 million times, they could only expect to collect around $4,000 total.
After much back-and-forth with Jacksonâs old bandmates, which included Journey bassist and American Idol host Randy Jackson and others who went on to successful music careers, they landed on a deal that gives about 67% to Earnest Jackson, 15% to the bandmates and the remainder to the label and others.
Any revenue generated from the song that goes to NPR will go back into producing more shows, Gonzalez and Beras say. They say they do not plan to recoup expenses from publishing and promoting the song, which included at least $10,000 in legal fees.
Once they uploaded the track to TuneCore and started promoting their first, possibly only hit, they learned that âInflationâ had to be streamed 5,000 times in the first week for the label to be able to pay for promotion. Fortunately, the song crested 65,000 plays in its first few days, but it still has some way to go to reach 1 million plays.
âNo one ever makes money on streaming,â Beras says, when asked what she learned from her reporting. âI feel like Iâve repeated that a thousand times and never understood what I said.â
âWe put all of our effort behind this song and behind Earnest Jackson and are going all in,â Beras says.
Next, they plan to make it a ringtone â which earns a bit more than streams â and they are trying to land it in a Netflix documentary.
Since launching their label last week, Planet Money has received two more submissions from musicians, according to Beras. For now, they are focused on âInflationâ and have no aspirations to âbecome music moguls,â Beras jokes.