Louisiana became one of the first states in the
Deep South with an
educational television station licensed to the state when
KLSE signed on from
Monroe on March 1, 1957.
Louisiana State University professor Lucille Woodward had urged
Governor Robert Kennon to create an Educational Television Commission as part of the State Department of Education, and KLSE was intended as the first station in a statewide educational television network along the lines of Alabama Educational Television (now
Alabama Public Television). However, KLSE signed off the air in 1964. For the next eleven years, the only area of the state with a clear signal from a
National Educational Television or PBS station was New Orleans, which was served by
WYES-TV. That station had signed on one month after KLSE, but was separately owned and operated. Woodward continued to urge the
Louisiana State Legislature not to drop the idea of educational television service in the state during the 1960s. Finally, in 1971, the recently created Louisiana Educational Television Authority approved the money to build and sign on the stations. On September 6, 1975, WLPB-TV in
Baton Rouge debuted as the state's first PBS member station outside New Orleans. Five more stations launched throughout the state, extending LPB's signal to portions of
Arkansas,
Mississippi and
Texas: KLTM-TV in
Monroe signed on in September 1976, followed by KLTS-TV in
Shreveport in August 1978, KLPB-TV in
Lafayette, KLTL-TV in
Lake Charles in May 1981 and finally, KLPA-TV in
Alexandria in July 1983. In 1985, Shreveport native and longtime Baton Rouge resident Beth Courtney was named president and CEO of Louisiana Public Broadcasting, a capacity she remains in to this day. LPB began broadcasting in
stereo in 1990. In 2001, LPB launched a cable-only channel, LPB Kids & You, on cable channel 11 in Baton Rouge. The channel, a predecessor to LPB 2, aired children's programming during prime time (atypical for PBS stations, which normally air children's programs only during the daytime hours) and adult and creative programs during the daytime hours. When PBS You and PBS Kids ceased operations in 2005, the channel became LPB Plus and expanded its cable coverage to Lafayette. In 2008, the service changed its name to LPB 2. Since 2009, Louisiana Public Broadcasting has added records of digitized audiovisual recordings to the
American Archive of Public Broadcasting via external links to the
Louisiana Digital Media Archive. ==Programming==