Formerly, much of American Public Media's programming content was distributed by
Public Radio International, which itself was named American Public Radio, or APR, until July 1, 1994. APR was formed by four stations—the
Minnesota Public Radio network,
WGBH in Boston,
WNYC in New York, and
KUSC in Los Angeles—to distribute
A Prairie Home Companion. PRI owns and produces numerous programs today, but still also distributes diverse programming from many sources. In contrast, APM, which was founded in 2004, predominantly distributes content that it owns and produces itself; exceptions include
The Story with Dick Gordon (which ended production in October 2013), the distribution to US stations of the
BBC World Service, and the
BBC Proms broadcasts from
Royal Albert Hall in London. The split happened as MPR and PRI began seeing each other more as potential competitors after MPR lost the partnership to WGBH to produce
The World, and MPR purchased PRI-distributed
Marketplace for its own distribution channels. ==APM Reports==