Kat here. Giving you the heads up to RadioNation with Laura Flanders. Laura's in South Dakota this weekend on the Purple tour to demonstrate how we're not "red" states or "blue" states but a varied nation that has a variety in every state, in every county, in every city and town.
RadioNation with Laura Flanders
This Weekend:
Do progressives need a new strategy in the culture wars?
Saturdays & Sundays, 7-10pm ET on Air America Radio
From South Dakota, Planned Parenthood's state director Kate Looby, Lynn Patrow of National Advocates for Pregnant Women and Charon Asetoyer of the Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center on what's next and what's needed as the nation's cruelest abortion ban awaits the governor's pen.
Then, from the Chicago suburbs, Democratic congressional candidate Christine Cegelis on her grassroots primary campaign.
Plus an Oscar preview with the Nation's culture-watcher Richard Goldstein.
And a media roundtable with New Orleanian Jordan Flaherty and "Information Is Power" reporter Terry Allen.
If you missed last weekend's live broadcast from Nevada, a one-hour version is available here: http://www.thenation.com
It's all on RadioNation with Laura Flanders this weekend on Air America Radio.
So make a point to listen. Laura always gives you plenty to think about. Not just in the show's opening but throughout. (The opening's are my favorite part, they're where Laura comments on the week past and the week coming up.)
radio
radionation with laura flanders
laura flanders
oscars
richard goldstein
kate looby
lynn patrow
charon asetoyer
christine cegelis
terry allen
jordan flaherty
south dakota
abortion
reproductive rights
ruths public radio report
kats korner
the common ills
Saturday, February 25, 2006
Ruth's Public Radio Report
Ruth: "You have no idea of it's reach!" That's what Treva told me over the phone Thursday from Arizona. As most of the community knows, Treva is my best friend of many, many years, someone who is active in any and every cause and someone who criss-crosses the country while I remain sedentary in what we were told would be our "golden years." Two wars waging and a third on the horizon does not even strike me as silver years. Maybe plastic.
But what was Treva speaking of? Democracy Now! What began as a Pacifica radio program on WBAI ten years ago, to cover the 1996 elections, is now a podcast, a TV show, still a radio program and so much more. I knew from my online family (this community) and my offline family that the program was a force to be reckoned with. But when Treva called and, during the course of our conversation, asked what would be the focus of this week's report, she wanted to weigh in.
She said that regardless of what town or city she is in, there is always someone recommending the program to her. It may be a teenager just getting active, it may be someone closer to our own generation. Regardless of age, gender or race, someone is always asking her if she has heard of Democracy Now!?
We have all heard of it but for anyone passing by, Democracy Now! is an hour long program that is hosted by Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez. The structure of the program is to spend roughly ten minutes items in the news, or items that should be in the corporate news, and to then explore issues in depth. That may mean interviewing a reporter from anywhere in the world or it might mean a sit down interview in the studio (whichever studio if the show is "on the road") or it could mean a debate. But it always means going in depth, beyond the headlines. It always means asking the questions that would otherwise go unasked.
C.I. and Mike have both commented on the fact that Ms. Goodman does not get lost in an interview and does not allow the audience to get lost either. When, in the midst of an answer, a guest brings up a new issue in passing, Ms. Goodman can be counted on to say, "Let's back up . . ." and not move on, as is so often in the case in interviews, to the next question. I am sure that as part of the work and she and the staff do, preparations are made ahead of time. But you hear, see or read someone who is actually listening and who is willing to explore a topic. That, in itself, is revolutionary in this day and age where the trade off on most programs seems to be, "I'll give you access to my audience and you can just tick off your talking points without worrying about me questioning them."
Hear, see or read? Democracy Now! airs on over four hundred stations. This includes Pacifica radio stations, community radio stations, college radio stations, NPR, PBS, public access TV and two satellite channels: Free Spech TV channel 9415 on Dish TV and Link TV channel 9410 on DIRECT TV. Globally, it is carried on Europe's World Radio Network and Australia's Community Broadcasting Associaton. Where there is online access, there is access to Democracy Now! Online, they stream the program both in audio format and in video format as well as allowing you to subscribe to their podcast. There is no charge for any of those services. Also online, here is where the "read" comes in, you can read transcripts of the show. The latter feature is something that members with older operating systems on their computers have noted they are grateful for in e-mails.
And let me do an announcement for members in the Dallas, Texas area. A number of them have written to complain about the fact that the local NPR (KERA) would not air Democracy Now! despite the fact that it has plenty of time to repeat some NPR programs twice daily. Democracy Now! has been added to Dallas Community Television (DCTV) and broadcasts twice daily: at seven in the morning and eleven at night. I am not sure whether members like Billie who live in the "greater DFW area" will be able to pick that up but I know that members who live in Dallas proper and have cable will be able to. And thanks to Eddie for passing that on and to Billie and Eddie for patiently explaining to me the "greater DFW area." Let me also encourage members in that area to continue to request that KERA air Democracy Now! Though I have never visited the city, I find it hard to believe that, for instance, there is a huge demand,outcry or need for two daily airings of Fresh Air.
For those attempting to locate a staion broadcasting Democracy Now! in their area, you can go online and check at the website.
So we have talked about the ways you can follow the program and we have talked about the show's format. Now we can focus on the nitty gritty. On August 19, 2005, where was Democracy Now! broadcasting from? Live from Camp Casey where they interviewed Cindy Sheehan, Ann Wright, Collen Rowley, and Hadi Jawad of the Crawford Peace House (among others). And, as C.I. pointed out, the Democracy Now! audience was already familiar with Cindy Sheehan before she made her first trip to Crawford. That is due to the fact that the program is not interested in providing the same sources you find on Meet the Press, who usually appear on Face The Nation and This Week and sometimes do all three on the same Sunday. The program is a chronicle of our times, addressing the issues that impact our lives.
Which is why we get reports like the ones featured on the March 15, 2005 broadcast: an interview with Kathie Dobie who wrote, for Harper's Magazine, of the 5,500 plus troops who had gone AWOL, as well an interview with three who had refused to continue to fight in the illegal war (Kevin Benderman, Carl Webb and a third man who did not want to be identified, plus
Mark Benjamin speaking on the casualities of those returning. Is war nothing more than flashy military toys? Democracy Now! thinks so which is why they take the time to interview Pablo
Paredes. These are the stories of our times, not what an administration spokesperson says, something that will usually be retracted in a few months, if not weeks. These are concrete stories about the world around us.
I asked Treva what stood out to her the most of all the reports she has followed on Democracy Now! Her choice, without hesitation, was the 2004 coverage of the DNC and RNC conventions.
For that coverage, the program expanded to two hours each day and went beyond the chosen few commentators of the mainstream press to give you a real sense of what was going on in Boston and New York City and how it would impact your lives.
My grandaughter Tracey didn't select two weeks of coverage, but she did select part one and part two of the interview with Hugo Chavez done by Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez and Margret Prescod of Sojourner Truth.
Betty selected the Rosa Parks coverage because "it shows the importance of the show and of independent media. Besides offering the very real perspective of what Rosa Parks stood for, something that was sorely missing in the 'she must have been tired and just wanting to sit down' mainstream coverage, they also dug into the Pacifica archives to provide her in her own words."
I asked Dona for her choice of favorite Democracy Now! report and she decided to "step away from the obvious" and note the program that airs on some holidays and explores the life of Yip Harburg, the lyricist of "Brother Can You Spare a Dime," "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" and much more.
For Elaine it would have to be the interview with Gareth Peirce, the British human rights attorney representing former prisoners of Guantanamo. Elaine told me that the interview had stayed with her and that it also includes the "key" to Democracy Now! when Amy Goodman reassures Ms. Peirce that there is time to respond because the program is not about soundbytes.
Jim selected an April 2005 interview with Naomi Klein on the topic of disaster capitalism which appears to be the only planning that the administration thought to do before invading Iraq.
Rebecca replied, "Anything with Robert Parry makes my favorite list but probably the one from last spring where he was on to address the issue of terrorist Luis Posada Carriles."
Also on terrorism, Mike noted the interview with Jennifer Harbury, in July, about torture committed by the CIA. For Jess, "no question, it's the interview with Jennifer Dohrn. Throughout the media, people who should have known better were hailing Mark Felt as a 'hero.' Democracy Now! wasn't afraid to challenge that talking point. Dohrn gave witness to reality and where else would that happen but Democracy Now!?" Trina selected the interview with Camilo Mejia upon his release from jail because "I didn't see the [Boston] Globe rushing to interview him. The story matters but you get to a certain age and you learn what matters to the people and what matters to the corporate press are frequently two different things." Trina also added that, for her husband, she'd better note the broadcast of Jessica Lange's speech at the September rally in D.C. "We saw that, remember?" Trina reminded me. "In person, and he and Jim's father were like school boys while she was speaking. You would have thought they'd have it out of their systems but when it aired the following Monday, I heard all over again how smart and how beautiful Jessica Lange was. She is. You don't need to hear that from your husband repeatedly but for those who missed the speech, it was worth airing."
For Kat, "It's the hour with Janis Karpinski. I have mixed feelings about Karpinski regarding what she could have done or couldn't have done but that was a solid, hour long interview and Goodman asked tough questions." Ty also selected an hour long interview, the one with Jane Goodall on "the environment, nature, animals and the world! It had everything."
My grandson Jayson could not choose one so he selected the interview with Alice Walker this month and he wanted me to note that the archived broadcasts are avaiable free of charge. One he enjoyed recently was the conversation between Howard Zinn and Arundhati Roy. He added, "Democracy Now! never suffers from 'War Got Your Tongue?'"
Wally had a broad topic: "The coverage of Iraq. All of it. People surprised by what's going on today should have been watching Democracy Now! One of my favorite guests on the subject is Dahr Jamail. One broadcast? Where he talked about the attacks on the hospitals in Iraq. And Dave Zirin talking about sports and politics and the impact the mixture can have and does have from athletes speaking out to stadiums that soak tax payers and enrich business."
Ava was almost as hard to pin down as C.I. She finally noted that whether "it's media consolidation or Judith Miller, the show leads on the issues and doesn't wait to see what's 'breaking' on CBS, for instance. If I was to narrow it down to one report, keeping that in mind, I'd go with a report on Filiberto Ojeda Rios being murdered by FBI agents back in September." C.I.? "Ruth, you know if I pick one story, the e-mails will pour in saying, 'How could you forget ___ and ___ and ___ and . . ." After additional pestering, I was able to pin down C.I. "Okay, one story? I'll drop back to the nineties so if any member wishes I'd picked something in the last few years, I'm going historical, that's my excuse. Operation Tailwind. CNN and Time washed their hands of the story. They disowned it, even though it wasn't bad reporting. I remember friends from CNN calling and saying, 'You've got to listen to Democracy Now! right now.' They covered it when the mainstream media wanted to bury it. What happened to Mary Mapes and the others at CBS can be traced back to what was done to April Oliver and Jack Smith. A story gets too 'hot' and it stops being about journalism and the job reporters do as the corporate office panics and turns it into 'court of law' issues. Oliver and Smith's reporting stood up as reporting, Mapes reporting stood up as reporting. In both cases, external pressure caused news organizations to cave and everytime they do that and get away with it, it's all the much harder for the next reporter to break a story."
Cedric selected the interview with musician and activist Harry Belafonte that aired in January which was a powerful interview and I saved Cedric's pick for last because Mr. Belafonte is participating in an event for Democracy Now! next month:
Democracy Now! and WBAI invite you to join us for an evening of conversation with Harry Belafonte, Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez and WBAI's Bernard White as we mark the 3rd anniversary of the invasion of Iraq and the 10th anniversary of Democracy Now!
Saturday, March 18, 2006
The Great Hall at Cooper Union
East 7th Street at Third Avenue
New York City
Pre-event reception: 6-7 p.m.
A special gathering with Harry Belafonte and Amy Goodman.
Hors d'oeuvres & Refreshments served.
Ticket price (includes admission to main event): $100
Main Event: 7 p.m. Ticket price: $25
Space is limited. Purchase your tickets today by clicking on the link directly above.
Tickets can be picked up at Cooper Union beginning at 4:30 PM on March 18th. Please print and bring the receipt generated at the end of this transaction to facilitate your ticket pick up.
On the stories selected above, did you see your favorite? As Marci would guess, I would pick a segment with Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights and Law and Disorder. But if, in the wide range of selections, you did not see your favorite report, consider that a testimony to the quality of Democracy Now! because there is so much to choose from. To celebrate the ten years of excellent programming, a special website has been set up that is offering highlights chosen by the people who work so hard to bring you Democracy Now! each Monday through Friday.
Want to celebrate the tenth anniversary but unable to attend the March 18th event? As Maria says, "Get the word out."
Now for a "get the word out" story from an e-mail that came in Friday evening. Andrea Lewis is a strong interviewer as anyone who has listened to KPFA's The Morning Show can tell you. One of our members in Texas listens online. Friday, while he was listening, a friend dropped by during the last hour of The Morning Show. Later the friend called asking for help finding "the NPR program you were listening to." The friend wanted to hear the interview Ms. Lewis had conducted with again and had gone to the NPR website but could not find it. Our member corrected that it was not NPR, it was Pacifica Radio and directed his friend to the KPFA archives. That is getting the word out. Want to increase the power and reach of Pacifica? Help get the word out.
By the way Friday's The Morning Show contained several interviews with authors:
Marc Siegel (Bird Flu: Everything You Need to Know about the Next Pandemic), Taylor Branch (At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years 1965 -68), Rabbi Michael Lerner (The Left Hand of God: Taking Back Our Country From The Religious Right) and a joint interview with Josh Kun (Audiotopia: Music, Race and America) and Kevin Phinney (Souled America: How Black Music Transformed White Culture)
All were wonderful interviews; however, it was the joint interview with Mr. Kun and Mr. Phinney that led to the attempts to hunt down the archived version of the broadcast.
Upcoming programs:
1) From KPFT in Houston:
Program Preemption on Tuesday, February 28 - 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Senate hearings on the National Security Agency's domestic surveillance program.
I do not doubt that other Pacifica stations may carry this but this morning only KPFT had a note up about it on their main page. Eight in the morning until five in the evening are Central Time Zone times.
2) KPFA's Sunday Salon with Larry Bensky
SundaySalon.org (9:00 am Pacific time, noon Eastern time):
First Hour
This week on Sunday Salon... In our first hour: The U.S. Military, Special Forces, and the Rise of the Rumsfeld Doctrine. Joining us: Cindy Williams, Principal Research Scientist of the Security Studies Program of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author, Holding the Line: U.S. Defense Alternatives for the Early 21st Century (MIT Press 2001) and Filling the Ranks: Transforming the U.S. Military Personnel System (MIT Press, 2004). Linda Robinson, Senior Writer for U.S. News & World Report specializing in national security issues. Philippe Sands, author, Lawless World: America and the Making and Breaking of Global Rules--From FDR's Atlantic Charter to George W. Bush's Illegal War
Second Hour
In our second hour... California's default into a death penalty moratorium. We'll check in with a physician regarding the medical ethics issues that led to the indefinite stay this week of Michael Morales' execution, then, an interview with Sister Helen Prejean ("Dead Man Walking" and "The Death of Innocents")
Last item, I know these reports seem to get longer and longer but there is always so much to note, Grant passed this on so offer congratulations to KPFT:
Texas Music Award Nominations: Who's Texas Music? Your Texas Music! KPFT has been nominated for a few awards in the 2006 My Texas Music Awards. KPFT and KPFT programmers have been nominated in the following categories:
Radio Station of the Year KPFT 90.1 FM
Disc Jockey of the Year Chris Collins, H.A.A.M. Radio (Mondays, 3:30-5:30)
Larry Winters, Spare Change (Saturdays, Noon 3:00 p.m.)
Your vote counts! VOTE NOW!
pacifica
pacifica radio
radio
wbai
kpfa
kpft
law and disorder
amy goodman
juan gonzalez
democracy now
dave zirin
jennifer dohrn
alice walker
naomi klein
dahr jamail
howard zinn
robert parry
arundhati roy
michael ratner
jessica lange
rosa parks
jane goodall
yip harburg
harry belafonte
gareth peirce
camilo mejia
kevin benderman
cindy sheehan
ann wright
sunday salon
sunday salon with larry bensky
the morning show
andrea lewis
sojourner truth
margaret prescod
marc siegel
michael lerner
josh kun
taylor branch
kevin phinney
chris collins
h.a.a.m. radio
larry winters
spare change
nsa
fisa
government snooping
government spying
snoopgate
thomas friedman is a great man
trinas kitchen
cedrics big mix
mikey likes it
like maria said paz
the third estate sunday review
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
the daily jot
kats korner
ruths public radio report
the common ills
But what was Treva speaking of? Democracy Now! What began as a Pacifica radio program on WBAI ten years ago, to cover the 1996 elections, is now a podcast, a TV show, still a radio program and so much more. I knew from my online family (this community) and my offline family that the program was a force to be reckoned with. But when Treva called and, during the course of our conversation, asked what would be the focus of this week's report, she wanted to weigh in.
She said that regardless of what town or city she is in, there is always someone recommending the program to her. It may be a teenager just getting active, it may be someone closer to our own generation. Regardless of age, gender or race, someone is always asking her if she has heard of Democracy Now!?
We have all heard of it but for anyone passing by, Democracy Now! is an hour long program that is hosted by Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez. The structure of the program is to spend roughly ten minutes items in the news, or items that should be in the corporate news, and to then explore issues in depth. That may mean interviewing a reporter from anywhere in the world or it might mean a sit down interview in the studio (whichever studio if the show is "on the road") or it could mean a debate. But it always means going in depth, beyond the headlines. It always means asking the questions that would otherwise go unasked.
C.I. and Mike have both commented on the fact that Ms. Goodman does not get lost in an interview and does not allow the audience to get lost either. When, in the midst of an answer, a guest brings up a new issue in passing, Ms. Goodman can be counted on to say, "Let's back up . . ." and not move on, as is so often in the case in interviews, to the next question. I am sure that as part of the work and she and the staff do, preparations are made ahead of time. But you hear, see or read someone who is actually listening and who is willing to explore a topic. That, in itself, is revolutionary in this day and age where the trade off on most programs seems to be, "I'll give you access to my audience and you can just tick off your talking points without worrying about me questioning them."
Hear, see or read? Democracy Now! airs on over four hundred stations. This includes Pacifica radio stations, community radio stations, college radio stations, NPR, PBS, public access TV and two satellite channels: Free Spech TV channel 9415 on Dish TV and Link TV channel 9410 on DIRECT TV. Globally, it is carried on Europe's World Radio Network and Australia's Community Broadcasting Associaton. Where there is online access, there is access to Democracy Now! Online, they stream the program both in audio format and in video format as well as allowing you to subscribe to their podcast. There is no charge for any of those services. Also online, here is where the "read" comes in, you can read transcripts of the show. The latter feature is something that members with older operating systems on their computers have noted they are grateful for in e-mails.
And let me do an announcement for members in the Dallas, Texas area. A number of them have written to complain about the fact that the local NPR (KERA) would not air Democracy Now! despite the fact that it has plenty of time to repeat some NPR programs twice daily. Democracy Now! has been added to Dallas Community Television (DCTV) and broadcasts twice daily: at seven in the morning and eleven at night. I am not sure whether members like Billie who live in the "greater DFW area" will be able to pick that up but I know that members who live in Dallas proper and have cable will be able to. And thanks to Eddie for passing that on and to Billie and Eddie for patiently explaining to me the "greater DFW area." Let me also encourage members in that area to continue to request that KERA air Democracy Now! Though I have never visited the city, I find it hard to believe that, for instance, there is a huge demand,outcry or need for two daily airings of Fresh Air.
For those attempting to locate a staion broadcasting Democracy Now! in their area, you can go online and check at the website.
So we have talked about the ways you can follow the program and we have talked about the show's format. Now we can focus on the nitty gritty. On August 19, 2005, where was Democracy Now! broadcasting from? Live from Camp Casey where they interviewed Cindy Sheehan, Ann Wright, Collen Rowley, and Hadi Jawad of the Crawford Peace House (among others). And, as C.I. pointed out, the Democracy Now! audience was already familiar with Cindy Sheehan before she made her first trip to Crawford. That is due to the fact that the program is not interested in providing the same sources you find on Meet the Press, who usually appear on Face The Nation and This Week and sometimes do all three on the same Sunday. The program is a chronicle of our times, addressing the issues that impact our lives.
Which is why we get reports like the ones featured on the March 15, 2005 broadcast: an interview with Kathie Dobie who wrote, for Harper's Magazine, of the 5,500 plus troops who had gone AWOL, as well an interview with three who had refused to continue to fight in the illegal war (Kevin Benderman, Carl Webb and a third man who did not want to be identified, plus
Mark Benjamin speaking on the casualities of those returning. Is war nothing more than flashy military toys? Democracy Now! thinks so which is why they take the time to interview Pablo
Paredes. These are the stories of our times, not what an administration spokesperson says, something that will usually be retracted in a few months, if not weeks. These are concrete stories about the world around us.
I asked Treva what stood out to her the most of all the reports she has followed on Democracy Now! Her choice, without hesitation, was the 2004 coverage of the DNC and RNC conventions.
For that coverage, the program expanded to two hours each day and went beyond the chosen few commentators of the mainstream press to give you a real sense of what was going on in Boston and New York City and how it would impact your lives.
My grandaughter Tracey didn't select two weeks of coverage, but she did select part one and part two of the interview with Hugo Chavez done by Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez and Margret Prescod of Sojourner Truth.
Betty selected the Rosa Parks coverage because "it shows the importance of the show and of independent media. Besides offering the very real perspective of what Rosa Parks stood for, something that was sorely missing in the 'she must have been tired and just wanting to sit down' mainstream coverage, they also dug into the Pacifica archives to provide her in her own words."
I asked Dona for her choice of favorite Democracy Now! report and she decided to "step away from the obvious" and note the program that airs on some holidays and explores the life of Yip Harburg, the lyricist of "Brother Can You Spare a Dime," "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" and much more.
For Elaine it would have to be the interview with Gareth Peirce, the British human rights attorney representing former prisoners of Guantanamo. Elaine told me that the interview had stayed with her and that it also includes the "key" to Democracy Now! when Amy Goodman reassures Ms. Peirce that there is time to respond because the program is not about soundbytes.
Jim selected an April 2005 interview with Naomi Klein on the topic of disaster capitalism which appears to be the only planning that the administration thought to do before invading Iraq.
Rebecca replied, "Anything with Robert Parry makes my favorite list but probably the one from last spring where he was on to address the issue of terrorist Luis Posada Carriles."
Also on terrorism, Mike noted the interview with Jennifer Harbury, in July, about torture committed by the CIA. For Jess, "no question, it's the interview with Jennifer Dohrn. Throughout the media, people who should have known better were hailing Mark Felt as a 'hero.' Democracy Now! wasn't afraid to challenge that talking point. Dohrn gave witness to reality and where else would that happen but Democracy Now!?" Trina selected the interview with Camilo Mejia upon his release from jail because "I didn't see the [Boston] Globe rushing to interview him. The story matters but you get to a certain age and you learn what matters to the people and what matters to the corporate press are frequently two different things." Trina also added that, for her husband, she'd better note the broadcast of Jessica Lange's speech at the September rally in D.C. "We saw that, remember?" Trina reminded me. "In person, and he and Jim's father were like school boys while she was speaking. You would have thought they'd have it out of their systems but when it aired the following Monday, I heard all over again how smart and how beautiful Jessica Lange was. She is. You don't need to hear that from your husband repeatedly but for those who missed the speech, it was worth airing."
For Kat, "It's the hour with Janis Karpinski. I have mixed feelings about Karpinski regarding what she could have done or couldn't have done but that was a solid, hour long interview and Goodman asked tough questions." Ty also selected an hour long interview, the one with Jane Goodall on "the environment, nature, animals and the world! It had everything."
My grandson Jayson could not choose one so he selected the interview with Alice Walker this month and he wanted me to note that the archived broadcasts are avaiable free of charge. One he enjoyed recently was the conversation between Howard Zinn and Arundhati Roy. He added, "Democracy Now! never suffers from 'War Got Your Tongue?'"
Wally had a broad topic: "The coverage of Iraq. All of it. People surprised by what's going on today should have been watching Democracy Now! One of my favorite guests on the subject is Dahr Jamail. One broadcast? Where he talked about the attacks on the hospitals in Iraq. And Dave Zirin talking about sports and politics and the impact the mixture can have and does have from athletes speaking out to stadiums that soak tax payers and enrich business."
Ava was almost as hard to pin down as C.I. She finally noted that whether "it's media consolidation or Judith Miller, the show leads on the issues and doesn't wait to see what's 'breaking' on CBS, for instance. If I was to narrow it down to one report, keeping that in mind, I'd go with a report on Filiberto Ojeda Rios being murdered by FBI agents back in September." C.I.? "Ruth, you know if I pick one story, the e-mails will pour in saying, 'How could you forget ___ and ___ and ___ and . . ." After additional pestering, I was able to pin down C.I. "Okay, one story? I'll drop back to the nineties so if any member wishes I'd picked something in the last few years, I'm going historical, that's my excuse. Operation Tailwind. CNN and Time washed their hands of the story. They disowned it, even though it wasn't bad reporting. I remember friends from CNN calling and saying, 'You've got to listen to Democracy Now! right now.' They covered it when the mainstream media wanted to bury it. What happened to Mary Mapes and the others at CBS can be traced back to what was done to April Oliver and Jack Smith. A story gets too 'hot' and it stops being about journalism and the job reporters do as the corporate office panics and turns it into 'court of law' issues. Oliver and Smith's reporting stood up as reporting, Mapes reporting stood up as reporting. In both cases, external pressure caused news organizations to cave and everytime they do that and get away with it, it's all the much harder for the next reporter to break a story."
Cedric selected the interview with musician and activist Harry Belafonte that aired in January which was a powerful interview and I saved Cedric's pick for last because Mr. Belafonte is participating in an event for Democracy Now! next month:
Democracy Now! and WBAI invite you to join us for an evening of conversation with Harry Belafonte, Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez and WBAI's Bernard White as we mark the 3rd anniversary of the invasion of Iraq and the 10th anniversary of Democracy Now!
Saturday, March 18, 2006
The Great Hall at Cooper Union
East 7th Street at Third Avenue
New York City
Pre-event reception: 6-7 p.m.
A special gathering with Harry Belafonte and Amy Goodman.
Hors d'oeuvres & Refreshments served.
Ticket price (includes admission to main event): $100
Main Event: 7 p.m. Ticket price: $25
Space is limited. Purchase your tickets today by clicking on the link directly above.
Tickets can be picked up at Cooper Union beginning at 4:30 PM on March 18th. Please print and bring the receipt generated at the end of this transaction to facilitate your ticket pick up.
On the stories selected above, did you see your favorite? As Marci would guess, I would pick a segment with Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights and Law and Disorder. But if, in the wide range of selections, you did not see your favorite report, consider that a testimony to the quality of Democracy Now! because there is so much to choose from. To celebrate the ten years of excellent programming, a special website has been set up that is offering highlights chosen by the people who work so hard to bring you Democracy Now! each Monday through Friday.
Want to celebrate the tenth anniversary but unable to attend the March 18th event? As Maria says, "Get the word out."
Now for a "get the word out" story from an e-mail that came in Friday evening. Andrea Lewis is a strong interviewer as anyone who has listened to KPFA's The Morning Show can tell you. One of our members in Texas listens online. Friday, while he was listening, a friend dropped by during the last hour of The Morning Show. Later the friend called asking for help finding "the NPR program you were listening to." The friend wanted to hear the interview Ms. Lewis had conducted with again and had gone to the NPR website but could not find it. Our member corrected that it was not NPR, it was Pacifica Radio and directed his friend to the KPFA archives. That is getting the word out. Want to increase the power and reach of Pacifica? Help get the word out.
By the way Friday's The Morning Show contained several interviews with authors:
Marc Siegel (Bird Flu: Everything You Need to Know about the Next Pandemic), Taylor Branch (At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years 1965 -68), Rabbi Michael Lerner (The Left Hand of God: Taking Back Our Country From The Religious Right) and a joint interview with Josh Kun (Audiotopia: Music, Race and America) and Kevin Phinney (Souled America: How Black Music Transformed White Culture)
All were wonderful interviews; however, it was the joint interview with Mr. Kun and Mr. Phinney that led to the attempts to hunt down the archived version of the broadcast.
Upcoming programs:
1) From KPFT in Houston:
Program Preemption on Tuesday, February 28 - 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Senate hearings on the National Security Agency's domestic surveillance program.
I do not doubt that other Pacifica stations may carry this but this morning only KPFT had a note up about it on their main page. Eight in the morning until five in the evening are Central Time Zone times.
2) KPFA's Sunday Salon with Larry Bensky
SundaySalon.org (9:00 am Pacific time, noon Eastern time):
First Hour
This week on Sunday Salon... In our first hour: The U.S. Military, Special Forces, and the Rise of the Rumsfeld Doctrine. Joining us: Cindy Williams, Principal Research Scientist of the Security Studies Program of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author, Holding the Line: U.S. Defense Alternatives for the Early 21st Century (MIT Press 2001) and Filling the Ranks: Transforming the U.S. Military Personnel System (MIT Press, 2004). Linda Robinson, Senior Writer for U.S. News & World Report specializing in national security issues. Philippe Sands, author, Lawless World: America and the Making and Breaking of Global Rules--From FDR's Atlantic Charter to George W. Bush's Illegal War
Second Hour
In our second hour... California's default into a death penalty moratorium. We'll check in with a physician regarding the medical ethics issues that led to the indefinite stay this week of Michael Morales' execution, then, an interview with Sister Helen Prejean ("Dead Man Walking" and "The Death of Innocents")
Last item, I know these reports seem to get longer and longer but there is always so much to note, Grant passed this on so offer congratulations to KPFT:
Texas Music Award Nominations: Who's Texas Music? Your Texas Music! KPFT has been nominated for a few awards in the 2006 My Texas Music Awards. KPFT and KPFT programmers have been nominated in the following categories:
Radio Station of the Year KPFT 90.1 FM
Disc Jockey of the Year Chris Collins, H.A.A.M. Radio (Mondays, 3:30-5:30)
Larry Winters, Spare Change (Saturdays, Noon 3:00 p.m.)
Your vote counts! VOTE NOW!
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Democracy Now! ten years and it's everywhere (list of stations airing Democracy Now!)
I'm assuming there will be multiple errors when this hits the site (probably with the icons) but Ruth's Public Radio Report today is on Democracy Now! and it's tenth anniversary. As we did with FAIR's recent anniversary, we'll note the stations that broadcast Democracy Now! You can click here and see the list at the Democracy Now! website.
The point of noting the stations is a) we're a resource/review and b) it is everywhere. Get the word out. And, note, links are included to help bring the program to your community.
Can't find your area? You can help bring Democracy Now! to a radio or television station in your community. To find out how, click here.
Across the U.S. |
| ||||
Alabama | |||||
Birmingham | SoulVibesRadio.com (Internet Station) | 1 p.m., 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Alaska | |||||
Anchorage | KYES TV 5/Channels 29, 80 & 5 | All channels, 4 am M-F;KYES UHF 29/80 & VHF 12: 1 a.m. Mon, 12 a.m. Th-Fri | |||
Anchorage | KUDO 1080 AM | 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Fairbanks | KSUA 91.5 FM | 5 p.m. M-F | |||
Girdwood | KEUL 88.9 FM | 7-9:30 p.m. W + occasionally | |||
Homer | KMJG, 88.9 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
Kasilof | KWJG, 91.5 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
Arizona | |||||
Bisbee | KBRP-LP 96.1 mHz | 10 am, 6 pm, M-F w/ Spanish headlines at noon | |||
Prescott | Access 13, Cable Ch. 13 | 3 p.m., T, Th | |||
Tucson | AccessTucson, Ch.99, Cox Comm | 6 a.m., 5 p.m., 11 p.m. M-F | |||
Tucson | KXCI 91.3 FM | 3-4 p.m., M-F | |||
Yuma | YCTV Ch. 71 | 5 a.m., 4 p.m., 9 p.m., M-F | |||
Arkansas | |||||
Conway | KHDX 93.1 FM | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Fayetteville | Community Access TV Ch. 18 | 7 a.m., M,W,F, 6 p.m., S,Su | |||
California | |||||
Arcata | KHSU 90.5 FM | 9 a.m. M-F | |||
Arcata, Eureka | Humboldt Community TV | 5. a.m., 9 a.m. M-F | |||
Berkeley | Berkeley Community Media Ch. 28/33 | Ch. 28: 5 a.m. T-F, Ch. 33: 4 p.m., 9 p.m. M-F | |||
Berkeley | KPFA 94.1 FM | 6 a.m., 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Chico | KZFR 90.1 FM | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Claremont | CCTV, Ch. 28 | 6 p.m., 10 p.m. M-F; repeats broadcasts 6p.m. & 10 p.m. Sat & Sun | |||
Crescent City-Brookings | KHSR 91.9 FM, 89.1 - Ferndale,89.7 Garberville,99.7 Willow Creek | M-F, 9-10am | |||
Davis | Davis Community TV Ch. 15 | 4 p.m. M-F | |||
Davis | KDVS 90.3 FM | 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. M,W,F | |||
Davis | KDRT-LP 101.5 FM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Fort Bragg | Mendocino Coast Comm. Ed. TV | 9 a.m., 4 p.m. M-F, 10 a.m. Sat | |||
Fresno | KFCF 88.1 FM | 6 a.m., 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Garberville, Redway, Southern Humboldt | Star Stream Cable Ch. 58 | Every day: 5am, 9am, 4pm, 9pm | |||
Garberville/Redway | KMUD 91.1 FM | 5 a.m., 12 p.m., M-F | |||
Georgetown | KFOK 95.1 FM | 11 p.m., M, W-F, 12 a.m., W | |||
Gilroy | CMAP Ch. 20 | 5 a.m. M-F | |||
Grass Valley | Nevada County TV | 6 a.m., 5 p.m. M-S | |||
Healdsburg | Access Healdsburg | 9 a.m., 9 p.m., M-F | |||
Hoopa | KIDE 91.3 FM | 1 p.m., M-F | |||
La Verne | LV3TV | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Lakeport | KPFZ 88.1 FM | 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Lancaster | Surge Radio 96.3 FM (Online) | 4 p.m., M-Th, 10 p.m., Fri | |||
Los Angeles | KPFK 90.7 FM | 6 a.m., 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Monterey | Access Monterey Peninsula, Ch. 24 | 6 a.m., Noon & 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Morgan Hill | Morgan Hill Access Television, Cable Ch. 19 | 9 p.m., M-F | |||
Mountain View | AMERICAN-FM on the internet | M-F: 1pm & 9pm GMT/9am & 5pm ET/6am & 2pm PT | |||
Mt. Shasta, Weed | MCTV Ch. 15 | 5 a.m., 9 a.m., 9 p.m., M-F | |||
N. San Luis Obispo/Monterey County | KBDH 91.7 FM | 9 a.m., 3 p.m., M-F | |||
Napa | Public Access, Ch. 28 | 4 p.m., Th & Fri | |||
Nevada City | NCTV, Ch. 11 | 6 a.m., 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Nevada City, Truckee | KVMR 89.5 FM, 105.1 FM in Truckee | 7 p.m., M-F | |||
Novato | NPAT Ch. 27 | 5 a.m., 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Oakland | KDOL Ch. 27 | 5 a.m., M-F | |||
Oakland | peralta.TV | 5 a.m., M-F; 9 p.m., M-Th | |||
Oceanside | KOCT-TV Ch.18 | 10 p.m., M-F; 11 p.m. T,W, Thu | |||
Oroville | KRBS-lp 107.1 FM | 7 a.m., 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Pacifica | Pacifica Community TV | M-F 5am, 9am | |||
Palo Alto | Community Media Center, Ch. 27 | 9 a.m, 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Petaluma | Petaluma Community Access Ch. 27 | 5 a.m., M-F on Ch. 27, 9pm M-F on Ch. 26 | |||
Philo | KZYX 90.7 FM | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Quincy | KHGQ | 5-6pm M-F | |||
Redding | KIXE-TV Ch. 9 (PBS) | Midnight, M-F | |||
Redlands | KMET 1490 AM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Rohnert Park | KRCB Ch. 22 (PBS) | M-F midnight | |||
Sacramento | Access Sacramento Ch.17/Ch. 18 | 5 a.m. M-F Ch 18; 6 p.m., 12 p.m. M-F Ch 17 | |||
Sacramento | KSSU 1580 AM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
San Diego | 106.9 FM | M-F, 8am, 3pm | |||
San Francisco | Citysites.com (Internet audio and video) | Available 24/7 | |||
San Luis Obispo | Public Access Channel 2 | 10:30 a.m. T, 7 a.m. TH | |||
San Luis Obispo | KCPR 91.3 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
San Luis Obispo | KCBX 90.1 FM | Noon, M, W, Th, F; occasionally Tuesdays at 4 p.m. | |||
San Luis Obispo | KBDH 91.7 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
San Rafael | Marin County Public Access Ch. 26 | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Santa Barbara | KCSB 91.9 FM | 4 p.m. M-F | |||
Santa Barbara | The Santa Barbara Channels, Ch. 17 | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Santa Cruz | Community TV of Santa Cruz, Ch. 26 and Ch. 27 | 9 a.m. M-F(Ch. 27), 4 p.m. M-F(Ch. 26) | |||
Santa Cruz | KUSP 88.9 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Santa Cruz | Free Radio Santa Cruz 101.1FM; Webcast at www.freakradio.org | M-F 8am, 12 noon; Spanish HL at 7:30 a.m., M-F (and occasionally on other Spanish programming) | |||
Santa Rosa | Santa Rosa Community Media Ch.72 | 5 a.m. M-F, 5 a.m. Sat, 4pm M-F on Ch. 72 | |||
Santa Rosa | KRCB 91.1, 90.9 FM | 3 p.m.,12 mid. M-F | |||
Ukiah | KMEC 105.1 | Weds, 8am; Spanish headlines 4 p.m, M-F | |||
Woodland | WAVE TV, Ch. 21 | 5 a.m., 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Colorado | |||||
Alamosa | KRZA 88.7 FM | 6-7 p.m., M-F | |||
Aspen | Grassroots TV Ch. 12 | 6 a.m., 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Basalt | Access Roaring Fork | 4 p.m., 7 a.m., M-F | |||
Boulder | KGNU 88.5 FM | 7a.m., M-F | |||
Carbondale | KDNK 90.5, 88.3, 100.1 FM | 6-7 pm, M-F | |||
Cortez | KSJD 91.5 FM | 6 p.m., T-F | |||
Crested Butte | KBUT 90.3 FM | 4-5 p.m., M, W-F | |||
Denver | Denver Community TV Ch.57, Ch. 59 | TBD | |||
Denver | KGNU 1390 am | 7a.m., 4:30 p.m. M-F | |||
Durango | Durango Community TV Ch.22 | 6 a.m., 10 p.m., M-F | |||
Durango | KDUR 91.9, 93.9 FM | 12-1 pm, M-F | |||
Fort Collins | KRFC 88.9 FM | 6-7pm M-F | |||
Gunnison | KBUT 89.9 FM | 4-5 p.m., M, W-F | |||
Louisville, Lafayette, Superior Colorado | CCTV Ch. 54/62 | 6am, 10am, 5pm, 10pm | |||
Paonia | KVNF 90.9 FM | 6 p.m., Tues-Fri | |||
Salida | KHEN 106.9 FM | Noon, 6pm M-F | |||
Silverton | KSJC 92.5 FM | 4-5 p.m., M-F | |||
Telluride | KOTO 91.7, 89.3 FM | 1-2 p.m., T | |||
Telluride | Telluride Community TV | 6 a.m. & 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Connecticut | |||||
Branford | Branford Communty TV Ch. 18 | TBD | |||
Bridgeport | Sound Veiw Community Media, Inc. | 11 p.m. T | |||
Canaan | CATV, Ch. 11 | 12 noon, M-F | |||
Hamden | Citizens Television Ch. 26 | 8am, Noon, 12midnight, M-F | |||
Hartford | Hartford Public Access Television, Inc. Ch. 5 | 12 p.m. M-F | |||
Middletown | WESU 88.1 FM | M-F noon-1pm | |||
Storrs | WHUS 91.7 FM | 12 noon M-F | |||
Storrs, Waterbury, Greater Hartford & Torrington | Huskyvision Ch. 78, University of Connecticut | 8 a.m., 7 p.m., midnight, M-F | |||
Willimantic | CTV Channel 14 | 9 p.m., Tuesday | |||
Florida | |||||
Coral Gables | WVUM 90.5 FM | TBD | |||
Hudson | Shadow Ridge Micro-Media 99.9 FM | 8:30 p.m., M-Th; 7 p.m., Fri | |||
Melbourne | WFIT, 89.5 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Sarasota | WSLR-LP 96.5 FM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Tampa | Speak Up Tampa Bay Ch. 19,20 | Ch. 19, 11 p.m. , Ch. 20, 12 a.m. M-F | |||
Tampa | WMNF 88.5 FM | 12-1 p.m., M-F | |||
Tampa | Freedom-TV (on the internet) | Mon-Fri 8:00 PM EST, Friday's show: Sat. + Sun. > > 6:00 PM EST | |||
Georgia | |||||
Athens | WPPP 100.7 FM | 6 a.m., M-F | |||
Atlanta | WRFG 89.3 FM | 5 p.m., M-Th, 4-5 p.m., F | |||
Atlanta | People TV, Channel 12 & 24 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Hawaii | |||||
Honolulu | KTUH 90.3 FM | 9 a.m., 7 p.m., Mondays | |||
Kahului, Maui | AKAKU Ch. 54 | 7 p.m. M-F | |||
Kaua'i,Hanalei | KKCR, 90.9, 91.9 FM | 11AM M-F | |||
Oahu | Olelo TV, Channel's 53 & 56 | 8am on Ch 53, 10pm on Ch 56 | |||
Idaho | |||||
Boise | Treasure Valley TV | 6 a.m., 10 p.m. M-F | |||
Moscow | KUOI 89.3 Fm | 8:30-9:30 a.m., 2:30-3:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Illinois | |||||
Champaign-Urbana | WEFT 90.1 FM | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Chicago | WZRD 88.3 FM | M-F, 7am, 8am | |||
Chicago | WRTE 90.5 FM | Noon, M-Th, 2 p.m, Fri w/ Spanish headlines at 9:00pm & on Saturday at 7 a.m. | |||
Chicago | WLUW 88.7 FM at Loyola University | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Macomb | WTND-LP 106.3 FM | 3 p.m., M-F | |||
Urbana | Urbana Public TV (UPTV) Channel 6 | 7a.m., M-F | |||
Indiana | |||||
Bloomington | Community Access TV Services (CATS), Cable Ch.3 | 8 a.m. 12 noon, M-F, 7 p.m. Tue - Fri | |||
Bloomington | WFHB 91.3 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
Fort Wayne | Access Fort Wayne, Ch. 57 | 8-9 a.m., M-F | |||
Richmond | WECI 91.5 FM | 5-6 p.m., M-F | |||
Iowa | |||||
Iowa City | Public Access Iowa City Ch.18 | 7 a.m. M-F; 7 a.m. Sat | |||
Waterloo | WCTV Ch. 17 | 7 am, 11am, 11pm M-Th; 7 am, 11am, 6 pm, 11 pm, Fri; Repeat Friday show at 7am, 11am, 11pm Sat & Sun | |||
Kansas | |||||
Kansas City | KKFI 90.1 FM | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
North Newton | KBCU 88.1 FM | 5-6 p.m., M-F | |||
Salina | Community Access TV of Salina, Ch. 19, 20, 21 | 5 p.m, 10 p.m. & 5 a.m., M-F | |||
Kentucky | |||||
Lexington | WRFL 88.1 FM - University of Kentucky | M-F 9am | |||
Louisville | WYCS-TV, UHF Ch. 24/Insight Cable 138 | 7 p.m., M-F | |||
Whitesburg | WMMT 88.7 FM | Sat 7-8pm, sun noon-1pm, Mon 6-7pm | |||
Louisiana | |||||
Lafayette | Acadiana Open Channel 19 | 11 a.m. & 11 p.m., M-F | |||
New Orleans | WTUL 91.5 FM | TBD | |||
Maine | |||||
Brunswick | Brunswick Cable 7 | Noon, M-F | |||
East Orland, Bangor | WERU 89.9 FM, 102.9 FM | 5-6 p.m., M-F | |||
Freeport | Freeport Public Access Ch 7 | 6 p.m. Mon-Sat | |||
Harpswell | Harpswell Community TV | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Newcastle | Lincoln County TV Ch.4 | 8 a.m., 7 p.m. M-F | |||
Norway/Paris | NPC-TV Ch. 2 | M-Sat: noon, 7pm 12am/Sun: 8am, 1 pm | |||
Portland | CTN-4 Ch.4 | 12 a.m. M-Sun, 12 p.m. M-F | |||
Portland | WMPG 90.9, 104.1 FM | 12-1 p.m., M-F | |||
Maryland | |||||
Baltimore | Baltimore Public Access, Ch. 75 | 6-7 PM M-F, repeats 8-9 AM next day (Tue-Sat) | |||
Baltimore | WJHU Johns Hopkins Student Radio | M-F 9am | |||
Massachusetts | |||||
Amherst | Amherst Comm. TV Ch 12 | 8 a.m., 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Amherst | WMUA 91.1 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Athol | AOTV13 | 12 a.m., 12 p.m. M-F | |||
Beverly | BevCam, Ch.10 | 8 a.m., 11 p.m. M-F | |||
Boston | WZBC 90.3 FM | noon -1 p.m., M-F | |||
Boston | Boston Neighborhood Network TV (BNN) | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Cambridge | CCTV Ch. 9 | 8 a.m., 9 p.m., M-F | |||
Cape Cod | Cape Cod Community Media Center, Ch. 17 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Chelmsford | Chelmsford TeleMedia | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Easthampton | Public Access Ch. 5 | 8 a.m., M-F, 3 p.m., Sundays | |||
Fitchburg | Fitchburg Access TV Ch. 10 | 7 a.m., 12 p.m. M-F, 12 a.m. T-S | |||
Florence | WXOJ-LP 103.3 FM | 4:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Great Barrington | WBCR-LP 97.7 FM | 11 a.m. & 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Greenfield | Greenfield Comm. TV Ch. 15 | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Hadley | Hadley Public Access TV 5 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Lowell | Lowell Telecommunications Ch. 8 | Noon, Sundays | |||
Lowell | WUML 91.5 FM | Spanish Headlines only at 11:00am, Wed & Thu | |||
Malden | MATV Ch. 3 | 8-9 a.m., 12-1 a.m. M-F | |||
Martha's Vineyard | MVTV Ch. 13 | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Natick | Natick Pegasus, Ch. 9/Ch. 3 | 8 a.m. M-S, 7 p.m. M,T,F,Sat | |||
Newton | NewTV | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Northampton | Northampton Community TV Channel 15 | 8 a.m., M-F, w/replays at 10 p.m., Mon, Tues, Wed, 6 p.m., Th, Fri | |||
Northfield | BNC-TV Channel 17 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Orleans & Brewster to Provincetown (Outer Cape Cod) | Lower Cape TV, Channel 17 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Plymouth | PAC-TV Channel 13 | M-F midnight | |||
Provincetown | WOMR 92.1 FM | 4-5 p.m., M-Th | |||
Reading | Reading Community Televison | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Salem | Salem Access TV Ch.3 | 8 a.m. M-F, 12 a.m. T-F, | |||
Shrewsbury | Shrewsbury Media Connection Ch. 33 | 8 a.m. M-Th | |||
Somerville | SCAT Ch 3 | 8 a.m. M-F. 4 p.m. T, 11:30 p.m. M (by request) | |||
South Yarmouth | C3TV Ch. 17 | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Springfield | WSCB 89.9 FM | 11 a.m. M,T; 1 p.m. W,Th,F | |||
Westfield | WSKB 89.5 FM | 3 p.m., Mon & Wed | |||
Williamstown | WCFM, 91.9 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
Williamstown | WilliNet Ch. 17 | 8 a.m., 12 n, , 7 p.m. M-F, 3 p.m. Su | |||
Michigan | |||||
Ann Arbor | Community TV Network, Ch. 17 | 10 a.m., Mon, Tu, Fri | |||
Ann Arbor | WCBN 88.3 FM | Noon, Tue, Thu | |||
Detroit | WDET 101.9 FM | 11 a.m., M-F | |||
Detroit/Windsor | CJAM 91.5 FM | 12 p.m. M-Th | |||
Flint | WKUF-LP | TBD | |||
Grand Rapids | GRTV Ch. 24 | 8 a.m., M-F; 12 a.m., M-Su | |||
Kalamazoo | Community Access Center, Ch. 19 & 21 | 8 a.m. M-F Ch. 19; 12 p.m. M-Thu Ch. 21 | |||
Lake Orion | Orion Neighborhood Television | 12 a.m., 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Manistee | Manistee Public Access TV Ch. 2 | TBD | |||
Monroe | Monroe Public Access | 12 a.m., 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Portage | Portage Cable Access, Channel 4 | 5 p.m., M-Th, 1 p.m. F | |||
Traverse City | Traverse Comm. TV Ch. 2 | 6 p.m. T-Sat | |||
Minnesota | |||||
Inver Grove Heights, South and West St. Paul | Town Square TV Channel 15 | 7 a.m., M-F | |||
Minneapolis | MTN Ch. 17 | 10 p.m. M-F | |||
Minneapolis-St.Paul | KFAI 90.3, 106.7FM | 12-1 p.m., 5-6 a.m., M-F | |||
Northfield | KRLX 88.1 FM | 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Roseville | North Suburban Access, CTV, Ch. 14 | M-F, 10am,6pm,2am with repeats on Sat/Sun | |||
St.Paul | Ch.15 Public Access | 7-8 a.m., M-F | |||
White Bear | Suburban Community TV, Ch. 15 | 7a.m., M-F with repeats at 11am, 6pm & 11pm | |||
Missouri | |||||
Columbia | KOPN 89.5 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Kansas City | KKFI 90.1 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
St. Louis | KDHX 88.1 FM | 6 p.m., M-F | |||
St. Louis | The Journey Internet Radio | 7 a.m. & 4 p.m., M-F | |||
St.Louis | DHTV Ch. 21 | 6 p.m., 11 p.m., M-F | |||
Montana | |||||
Billings | Bresnan Cable, Channel 7 | 6 a.m., M-F | |||
Missoula | MCAT Ch. 7/Ch. 8 (in Grant Creek)/Ch. 13 (in Rattlesnake) | 6 a.m. M-F | |||
Pablo | KSKC-TV Ch. 25 (PBS) | 10 a.m. M-F | |||
Nebraska | |||||
Lincoln | KZUM, 89.3 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
Omaha | Omaha Independent Radio 1690 AM | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Nevada | |||||
Reno | Sierra Nevada Community Access Television (SNCAT), Ch. 16 | 3 p.m., M-F | |||
New Hampshire | |||||
Dover | WXGR 101.5 FM | 6 a.m., 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Etna | WXND 107.3 FM | 6 a.m., 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Hanover, Dartmouth, West Lebanon, Canaan, Meriden | Upper Valley Education Connection, Channel 10 | M-F noon & 7pm with reruns on the weekend | |||
Keene | WKNH 91.3 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Portsmouth | WSCA-LP 106.1 FM | M-F 5-6pm | |||
New Jersey | |||||
Newark | The Novel Sound Radio 100.1 FM | 5 p.m., M-F with Spanish headlines at 4:50 & 6p.m. | |||
Piscataway | RLC-WVPH 90.3 FM | 6-7 p.m. M-F | |||
Princeton | TV 30 | 8 a.m. & midnight, M-F | |||
New Mexico | |||||
Albuquerque | 3CTV Ch. 27 | 10 am M-F | |||
Albuquerque | KUNM 89.9 FM | 4-5 p.m., M-F | |||
Gallup | KGLP 91.7 FM | 3-4 p.m., M-Th | |||
Las Cruces | KRUX 91.5 FM | 3-4 p.m. M-F | |||
Los Alamos | Los ALamos Comm. TV Ch 8 | 6 a.m., 5 p.m. M-F | |||
Rio Rancho | Ch. 51 | TBD | |||
Santa Fe | KSFR 90.7 FM | 6-7 a.m., M-F | |||
Silver City | CATS Ch. 17 | 6-8 a.m., 5-6 p.m., M-F | |||
Taos | Taos Public Access Ch. 2 | 10-11a.m,. 5-6p.m., 10-11p.m. M-Su | |||
New York | |||||
Albany, Schenectady | Albany Public Access/Time Warner Channel 18 | Mon 6:30pm, Tues 5pm, Thurs. 1:30pm | |||
Alfred | WALF 89.7 FM | 4 p.m. M-F | |||
Binghamton | WHRW 90.5 FM | 6 p.m., M | |||
Binghamton | WSQX 91.5 FM | 12 p.m., M-F | |||
Bronx | Bronxnet Ch. 67 | 9 a.m., T, Th | |||
Brookhaven-Happaugue | B-H PATV Ch. 20 | 5 p.m., Tuesdays | |||
Brooklyn | BCAT Ch. 34/67 | 9 a.m. M-F | |||
Buffalo | WHLD 1270 AM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Corning | WSQX 90.7 FM | 12 p.m., M-F | |||
Cortland | WSUC 90.5 FM | 2 p.m., Wed & 4 p.m., Thurs | |||
Geneva | WEOS 89.7, 90.3 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Ithaca | WEOS 88.1 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Ithaca | Pegasys Channel 13 | 11:30 p.m. live, 8 a.m & 12 p.m repeats daily | |||
Jeffersonville | WJFF 90.5, 94.5 FM | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Long Island | Woodbury System Ch. 20 | Mondays 5:30pm | |||
Long Island, Stony Brook | WUSB 90.1 FM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Mamaroneck | Larchmont Mamaroneck Community Television Ch. 77 | Noon & 7 p.m., M-F | |||
Mayville | Mayville Public Access, Channel 5 | Periodically at 3 & 9pm | |||
New Paltz | WFNP 88.7 FM | 8 p.m., Tue & Fri | |||
New York | CUNY-TV Ch. 75 | 6:30pm, M-F with repeat broadcast at 1 a.m., M-Th | |||
New York | Manhattan Neighborhood Network (cable) Ch. 34, 107 | 8-9 a.m., M-F | |||
New York | WBAI 99.5 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Oneonta | WRHO 89.7 FM | Noon, M, W, F | |||
Poughkeepsie | WVKR, 91.3 FM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Queens | QPTV Ch. 56 | 8 p.m. F, 4 p.m. Sat. | |||
Rochester | RCTV | 12 p.m. M-F | |||
Saratoga Springs | WSPN 91.1 FM | TBD | |||
Schenectady | WRUC 89.7 FM | TBD | |||
Southampton, Hampton Bays & Watermill | Cablevision Riverhead Public Acces, Ch. 20 | 10 p.m., Mon; 7 p.m., Tues; 9 p.m., Wed | |||
Staten Island | Staten Island Community TV | 12 a.m. M , 1 p.m. Thu | |||
Syracuse | Time Warner Ch. 98 | 9 a.m., Sat | |||
Syracuse | WXXE 90.5 FM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Troy | WRPI 91.5 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Wainscott (East Hampton) | LTV Ch. 20 | 8 a.m. M T Th F; 7 p.m. W; 12 a.m. T W F | |||
Westchester County | WDFH 90.3 FM | 8am-9am, 12pm-1pm M-F | |||
Woodstock | Woodstock Ch. 23 | 10 a.m., M-Thu & 7 p.m. Thu | |||
North Carolina | |||||
Asheville | WFRA 107.5 FM | 6-7 p.m., M | |||
Asheville | WPVM 103.5 FM | 1 p.m., 5 p.m., 9 p.m., 9 a.m. M-F | |||
Carrboro | WCOM 103.5 FM | 8 a.m. & 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Chapel Hill | The Peoples Channel, Ch. 8 | 7 p.m., M-F | |||
Durham | WNCU 90.7 FM | 6:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Greensboro | Greensboro Community TV | TBD | |||
Greensboro | WQFS 90.9 FM | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Wilmington | WOAR, Wilmington Open Air Radio 1610 AM | 1 p.m., 4 p.m. & 8 p.m., M-F | |||
North Dakota | |||||
Bismarck | Community Access Television Ch. 12 | 7 a.m., 11 a.m., M-F | |||
Ohio | |||||
Centerville | Miami Valley Communications Television Council | 10 a.m., M-F, 12 a.m., T,W,F, 8 a.m. Sun | |||
Cincinnati | MediaBridges, Ch. 4 | 8-9 a.m., M-F | |||
Cleveland | Village Television Ch 20 | 8 a.m., 12 p.m., , 7 p.m. M-F | |||
Cleveland | WRUW 91.1 FM | 6 am (Tuesday broadcast), 3pm, Wednesdays | |||
Dayton | DATV Dayton Public Access Ch. 20 | 8 a.m. Sundays w/ unscheduled replays weekdays | |||
Delaware | WSLN 98.7 FM | 3-4 p.m., M-F | |||
Gambier | WKCO 91.9 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Kingsville | WZKW-LP, 106.7 FM | 7 a.m., 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Oregon | |||||
Ashland | Ashland Fiber Network Cable TV, Channel 36 | 9 p.m., 9 a.m., 5 a.m. M-Sun | |||
Ashland | KSOC Radio Free Ashland | 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Beaverton | Tualatin Valley Community Access Ch. 23 | 5 a.m., 4 p.m., M-F | |||
Bend | KPOV-LP 106.7 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Cottage Grove | KSOW 106.7 FM | M-F 5pm | |||
Dallas | KPIE-LP, 94.3 FM | 3 p.m., M-F | |||
Eugene | Community TV of Lane County Ch. 29 | 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Eugene | KWVA 88.1 FM | 7-8 a.m., M-F | |||
Gresham | Metro East Community Media, Ch. 21 & 22 | 11 a.m. on Ch. 21; 5 p.m., 10 p.m. & 1 a.m. on Ch. 22 | |||
Klamath Falls | KTEC 89.5 FM | 9-12noon, Sundays | |||
McMinnville | KSLC 90.3 FM | 9-10 a.m., M-F | |||
Portland | Portland Cable Access Ch. 23 | 9 a.m., 4 p.m. M-F; 9 a.m., Sat, Sun | |||
Portland | KPSU 98.3 FM | 9-10 a.m., M-F | |||
Portland | KBOO 90.7 FM | 11 a.m., M-F | |||
Salem | CCTV - Capital Community TV Ch. 23 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Pennsylvania | |||||
Erie | WQLN 91.3 FM | TBD | |||
Erie | Community Access TV, (CAT-TV) Ch. 2 | 8 a.m. M, W, F; 7 p.m. Tues & Thur | |||
Lansdale | RadioVeronica, 106.5 mHz | 12 p.m., 6 p.m., 11p.m., M-F with Spanish Headlines 10:50 pm M-F; Reruns Sun, 7 a.m. - 10 a.m. | |||
Philadelphia | DUTV Ch. 54 (in some areas 3,48,62,99) | 8 a.m., noon, 7 p.m., midnight, M-F | |||
Philadelphia | Radio Volta on the Internet | M-F 8-9am, 5-6pm | |||
Pittsburgh | PCTV Ch. 21 | 8 a.m. M-F | |||
Pittsburgh | WRCT 88.3 FM | 8-9 a.m., M-F | |||
Wilkes Barre | WCLH 90.7 FM | 11 a.m., M-F | |||
Williamsport | WLYC 1050 AM | TBD | |||
South Carolina | |||||
Charleston | COFC 97.5 FM College of Charleston | 10 a.m., M, Tu, Wed & Fri | |||
Tennessee | |||||
Chattanooga | WYHB-TV, Ch. 39 | Noon, M-F | |||
Johnson City | WETS 89.5 FM | 6 p.m. M-F | |||
Nashville | WRFN-LPFM 98.9 | 7 a.m., 2 p.m. M-F | |||
Texas | |||||
Austin | Austin Community Television Ch. 16 | 6-7 p.m., M-F | |||
Austin | KAZI 88.7 fm | 12-1 p.m. M-F | |||
CollegeStation | KEOS 89.1 FM | 9-10 a.m., M-F | |||
Dallas | Dallas Community Television (DCTV), Ch. 27 | 7 a.m. & 11p.m., M-F | |||
Galveston | KPFT 89.5 FM | 9-10 a.m., M-F | |||
Houston | We The People TV Ch. 17/98 | 7-8 a.m., M-F; Check listings for repeats on wkends | |||
Houston | KPFT 90.1 FM | 9 a.m. & 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Utah | |||||
Moab | KZMU 89.7, 106.1 FM | 8 a.m., T- F, 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Park City | KRCL 96.5 FM | 5:30-6:30 p.m., M-Th | |||
Salt Lake City | KRCL 90.9 FM | 6:00-7:00 p.m., M-F | |||
Vermont | |||||
Bellows Falls | WOOL-LP 100.1 FM | 8 a.m., 6 p.m., repeats at 1 a.m. M-F | |||
Bennington | WBTN 1370 AM | 11 a.m., M-F | |||
Bennington | CAT-TV Channel 17 | M-F 8 AM and midnight | |||
Brattleboro | BCTV Ch. 8 | M-F 8am, 12noon, Sat. 9 a.m., 1 p.m. and occasionally at 7pm | |||
Burlington | CCTV Ch. 17 | 5:55 p.m. M; 11:45 p.m. T&W; 6:40 p.m. Sat & Sun | |||
Burlington | Free Radio Burllington 87.9, 94.3 f.m. | 6-7 p.m., M-F | |||
Colchester | RETN Ch. 16 | TBD | |||
Johnson | WJSC 90.7 FM | 12-1 p.m., M-F | |||
Ludlow | LPC-TV Ch. 8 | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Manchester | GNAT-TV | 8 a.m., M-F, 12 a.m., M-F | |||
Middlebury | WRMC 91.1 FM | 5-6 p.m., M-F | |||
Norwich, Hartford, Hartland, White River Junction | Upper Valley Education Connection, Channel 10 | M-F noon & 7pm with reruns on the weekends | |||
Plainfield | WGDR 91.1 FM | 10-11 a.m., 6:30-7:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Warren | WMRW-LP | 12 noon, M-F | |||
Waterbury | WDEV, 96.1 FM, 550 AM | M-F 5:30-6:30pm | |||
Virginia | |||||
Bealeton | Squat FM WYQZ 96.7 | 8 a.m. & 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Charlottesville | CPA-TV | 8 p.m., M | |||
Harrisonburg | WEMC 91.7 FM | 10 p.m., M-F | |||
Norfolk | WNSB 91.1 FM | 10 a.m., M-F | |||
Richmond | WRIR 97.3 FM | M-F 8am | |||
Washington | |||||
Bainbridge Island | Bainbridge Island Broadcasting Ch. 12 | 4 p.m. M-Sat; 9 p.m. T, Thu, Fri | |||
Bellevue | KBCS 91.3 FM | 6-7 a.m., 5-6 p.m. M-F | |||
Bellingham | KUGS 89.3 FM | 7-8 a.m., 7-8 p.m., M-F | |||
Bremerton - Kitsap | Bremerton-Kitsap Access TV 12, 3 | 10 a.m., Tu-Fri; 11a.m. Saturdays | |||
Chewelah | KCHW-LP 97.3 FM | 8 a.m., M-F | |||
Everett | KSER 90.7 FM | 3 p.m., M-F | |||
Kent | Puget Sound Access Ch. 77 | 5 a.m., 5 p.m. M-F | |||
Kettle Falls | KITR-LP 101.5 FM | 9 a.m., 6:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Mt. Vernon | KSVR 91.7 FM | 4-5 p.m., M-F | |||
Olympia | TCTV Ch. 22/29 | 5-6 a.m., , 4-5 p.m., M-F | |||
Olympia | KAOS 89.3 FM | 9-10 a.m., M-F | |||
Seattle | Seattle Community Access Network Ch. 77, 29 | 5 a.m., M-F | |||
Seattle | KBCS 91.3 FM | 6-7 a.m., 5-6 p.m. M-F | |||
Seattle | KPTK AM 1090 | 10 a.m., Sat & Sun | |||
Spokane | Spokane Community Access Ch. 5 | TBD | |||
Spokane | KYRS 95.3 FM & 92.3 FM | 8 a.m. & 5 p.m., M-F | |||
Vancouver | FVTV Ch. 11 | 5 a.m., M-F; 7 p.m. Th, Sat | |||
Vashon Island | Voice of Vashon, 89.1 FM | 9-10 p.m., M-F | |||
Walla Walla | KWCW 90.5 FM | 8-9 a.m., M-F | |||
Washington D.C. | |||||
Washington DC | WPFW 89.3 FM | 8 a.m. 6 p.m., M-F | |||
West Virginia | |||||
Clay | WYAP-LP 101.7 FM | 5:30 p.m., M, Tue, Thu, Fri | |||
Wheeling | WVJW 94.1 | noon- 1p.m., M-F | |||
Wisconsin | |||||
Adams | Adams City Cable, Ch. 4 | 7 p.m. Tuesdays | |||
Eau Claire | WLFK-LP 107.9FM | TBD | |||
Hayward | WOJB 88.9 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Kenosha | WIPZ 101.7 FM | 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Madison | WYOU Ch. 4 | 7 a.m., 6 p.m. M-F | |||
Madison | WORT 89.9 FM | 1-2 p.m., M-Th; Spanish headlines at 6 p.m. on Tuesdays | |||
Milwaukee | MATA Ch. 14 | 7 a.m. & 6 p.m., M-F | |||
Oshkosh | WRST, 90.3 FM | 1 p.m., Sundays | |||
Viroqua | Radio Driftless (on the internet) | 9 a.m. & 5 p.m., M-F | |||
West Allis | West Allis Community Media Center Ch. 14 | 7 a.m., 11 p.m., M-Sun | |||
Alberta | |||||
Edmonton | CJSR 88 FM | 5 p.m., M | |||
British Columbia | |||||
Burnaby | CJSF 90.1 FM | 11 a.m., M-F | |||
Lillooet | CHLS Radio Lillooet 100.5 FM | M-F 12 noon | |||
Nanaimo | CHLY Radio Malaspina, 101.7 FM | 12 p.m., Th | |||
Nelson | CJLY 93.5 FM | 6 & 9 a.m., M-F | |||
Prince George | CFUR 88.7 FM | M-F 11am | |||
Vancouver | CiTR 101.9 FM | Weds, 2pm | |||
Vancouver | CFRO 102.7 FM | M-F 6am | |||
Victoria | CFUV 101.9 FM | 12 PM M-Th, 11 AM F | |||
Manitoba | |||||
Winnipeg | CKUW 95.9 FM | 9-10 a.m., M-F | |||
New Brunswick | |||||
Sackville | CHMA, 106.9 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
St. John | CFMH 92.5 FM | M-F, 12noon | |||
Northwest Territories | |||||
Igaluit | CFRT | TBA | |||
Nova Scotia | |||||
Antigonish | CFXU 92.5 FM | Noon, M-F | |||
Halifax | CKDU 97.5 FM | M-F 12 noon | |||
Ontario | |||||
Guelph | CFRU-FM 93.3 | 11. a.m., M, W, F | |||
Kingston | CFRC 101.9 FM | M-F 12 noon | |||
Windsor | CJAM 91.5 FM | TBD | |||
York | SRN Radio 1 on the internet | 11a.m., Sat & Sun | |||
International | |||||
Across Australia | Available via the CBAA satellite to many community stations | ||||
Across Europe | via the World Radio Network:
| 1500 UTC, M-F | |||
Adelaide, Australia | Radio Adelaide 101.5 FM | 12 midnight, Thursdays | |||
Caracas, Venezuela | Radio Comunitaria Sendero 101.7 FM | Spanish Headlines 10:30 a.m., M-F | |||
Cordoba and Jaén, Andalucia, Spain | Onda Azul Radio, 88.0 FM | Spanish headlines: 1:00 p.m., 9:00 p.m., and 11:00 p.m. weekdays | |||
Correa, Santa Fé, Argentina | Radio FM Alas, 106.9 FM | Spanish headlines: 9:00 a.m. weekdays | |||
Invercargill, New Zealand | Radio Southland, 96.4FM | 11 p.m. weekdays | |||
La Plata, Argentina | Radio Futura, 90.5 FM | Spanish headlines: 1:00 p.m. Tuesdays | |||
La Plata, Argentina | Radio Menfis, 102.9 FM | Spanish headlines: 9:30 a.m. Saturdays | |||
London, England | Resonance 104.4 FM | 11 a.m., Thursdays | |||
Madrid, Spain | Radio Enlace 107.5 FM | Spanish headlines: 11:30 a.m. Mondays and 3:00 p.m. Fridays | |||
Madrid, Spain | Radio Almenara 91.4 FM | Spanish headlines: 4:00 p.m. weekdays | |||
Montevideo, Uruguay | Radio Mundo Real | Spanish headlines: 1:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. weekdays | |||
San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina | Radio Nacional Tucumán, AM 1190 | Spanish headlines: 12:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Stockholm, Sweden | Café Stereo, La Radio Bolivariana | Spanish Headlines 2:30 p.m., M-F | |||
Sydney, Australia | 2RSR - Radio Skid Row 89.9 FM | 9 a.m. weekdays | |||
Teocelo, Veracruz, Mexico | Radio Teocelo XEYT 1490 KHZ A.M. | Spanish headlines: M-F 1:30pm & 6:30pm and during M-F 8-11am News magazine | |||
HELP BRING DEMOCRACY NOW! TO YOUR COMMUNITY!! |
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Dallas is hunting down links for Ruth's report (thank you, Dallas) and it will be posted to the site as soon as all the links are added.
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