Radio Nepal and Nepal Television have entered a new era in their historic voice-image-mass-media-life. They have now moved not only to Public Service Broadcasting but also to a single media-entity. Thanks to a long-awaited bill passed by parliament and endorsed by President, the duo should now be administered not by government but by an independent body ensuring PSB for all types of audience –listeners, viewers and users. Broadcasting news, information, educational messages, and entertainment programmes for the public- man or woman in the street- differs from disseminating the same with focus on government, its ministers and officials. That is why RN and NTV should now change the target or focus of all their productions; for this they should keep themselves independent from the government intervention in their production and functioning. Unless this is done, justice will not be done to the spirit of the PSB. The provision in the law –continuing government-control- hand in the structure of PSB could create some friction in this regard. Leadership of both RN and NTV should take care of it; remind government of PSB as soon as they feel intervention of any sort. PSB, all should understand, cannot be practiced in absence of complete independence from government and others. All outside RN and NTV, particularly the civil society, professional bodies, constitutional institutions of the State and media users should also honour both as the media dedicated to the service of the public. Getting to serve Nepalis in Nepal and abroad and others under the PSB is a golden opportunity. RN and NTV understand the point well; both have learnt from their glorious history most of the art and skill of broadcasting for mass audience. Both are familiar with the journalistic fact that they should be the voice or image of the society particularly its plurality with emphasis on the voiceless, the oppressed, the deprived and the marginalized. A number of challenges will of course crop up before sound and image players; the changes brought about by Internet and digital means of communication have taken away the audience of both RN and NTV. Commercial media and social media have snatched away a large section of media consumers. Re-attracting them and retaining them is a great challenge. The same could be addressed journalistically through the right independent approach of media content production. If all RN and NTV human resources could work as a team dedicated to facilitating appropriate media contents, both would be able to make a difference in media world in the country and abroad. May RN and NTV emerge as exemplary Public Service Broadcasters from 2025 on!