Ideastream (marketed as Ideastream Public Media) is the main public broadcaster in Cleveland, United States, serving both Greater Cleveland and much of Northeast Ohio. Its headquarters, newsroom, and radio and television studios are located at the Idea Center in Playhouse Square in Downtown Cleveland. It operates WKSU (), the region's main radio news service aligned with NPR, and owns classical music/jazz outlet WCLV (), JazzNEO ( HD2 and WCSB ), and Cleveland PBS member station WVIZ (channel 25).
Ideastream was formed in July 2001 through a merger of equals between WVIZ and then-NPR member WCPN (since supplanted by WCLV), which up to that point operated separately as Educational Television Association of Metropolitan Cleveland and Cleveland Public Radio, respectively. Talks of a cooperative agreement between the two entities began in 1999, but was first proposed in 1993, when co-founder Jerrold Wareham was named as WVIZ's general manager. WCLV, then operating as a Lorain-licensed station WCPN, was donated to the group in 2011. Since 2021, Ideastream has operated WKSU and its repeater network on behalf of owner Kent State University, and has been Cleveland and Akron's sole NPR station of record since March 28, 2022. Kevin E. Martin has been the organization's president/CEO since January 9, 2017, succeeding Jerrold Wareham. Jenny Northern, a staffer with WCLV since 2001, was elevated to station manager in 2014 and became general manager for all stations in 2020.
All stations in the group jointly rebranded as Ideastream Public Media on June 15, 2021, to celebrate the entity's 20th anniversary.
The station and its full-power repeater network carry a roster of four HD Radio subchannels: a simulcast of WKSU's analog transmission, folk music via Folk Alley, a simulcast of WCLV and an alternate lineup of news and talk programs. HD Radio Guide for Cleveland HD Radio Guide for Akron, Ohio
WCLV's current frequency was previously home to WCPN, one of Ideastream's two founding partners and, from 1984 to 2022, competed with WKSU as the region's other NPR member. It is also the successor station to WBOE, which the Cleveland Board of Education operated from 1938 to 1978, (Guide to reading History Cards) one of the first formally licensed non-commercial educational radio stations on the FM dial and one of the first FM stations in Ohio.
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