![Tucker Carlson: NPR is destroying itself from within](https://cf-images.us-east-1.prod.boltdns.net/v1/static/694940094001/322942cf-6cd9-4946-86e3-ae9e8ba707be/3017a0a9-1839-4218-89f0-beb7d048f97c/1280x720/match/image.jpg)
Tucker Carlson: NPR is destroying itself from within
Fox News
The publicly-funded media giant has changed completely, it's unrecognizable, said Carlson.
Everywhere in this country formally respectable organizations seem to have gone off the deep end. Have you listened to National Public Radio recently? Admittedly NPR was always a little nutty, but in a familiar, non-threatening kind of way. Your average public radio station ran niche cultural programming most of the time. The Celtic music hour or a bluegrass show.
In fact, for decades, public radio’s most popular feature was something called "Car Talk." Remember that? It was a show where two Italian mechanics from Boston argued about the merits of carburetors verse fuel injections. They gave you free advice on how to fix your Honda. And then in the morning and again at night, always in drive time, all NPR stations aired the news from Washington. There was the "Morning Edition" in the morning. There was "All Things Considered" on the trip home.