Creative PR

 

Introducing RIGHTS WATCH RADIO with Anne Garrels

Rights Watch Radio presents four insightful reports for your newscast, or news magazine programs.

Veteran public radio journalist Anne Garrels looks at the new issues and voices that are defining today’s human rights movement.

Produced by Barret Golding, Jessie Graham, & Anne Garrels

With voices from Burma, Congo, Lebanon, Kenya, India and beyond.

See more information and details HERE

 

DÉJÀ VU ALL OVER AGAIN: WIKILEAKS AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS


L.A. Theatre Works invites you to revisit -

Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers

Starring John Heard as Ben Bradlee, Susan Sullivan as Katherine Graham, and Gregory Harrison as Brian Kelly.

In the late 1960′s, a classified government study of the Vietnam War revealed that the U.S. had misled the public regarding its intentions in Southeast Asia. Yet the Nixon administration continued to paint an optimistic picture of the war effort while sending more and more young Americans into the conflict. One of the document’s contributors, Daniel Ellsburg, decided that the public needed to know the truth about Vietnam, and leaked the study to the press. The result shook America to its core and challenged the First Amendment.

Plus! – Both hours include panel discussions with key figures from the era of the Pentagon Papers and Watergate, including journalist Carl Bernstein, former White House counsel John Dean, and Daniel Ellsburg himself.

FOR MORE INFORMATION click HERE

 

New Music Special!

Available Now

A two-part, two-hour documentary from the producers of
Truckin’ My Blues Away

Still Singing the Blues Logo
LENGTH: 2 hours
A two-part, two-hour documentary. Pair together or broadcast independently as one-hour specials.

COST: FREE

AVAILABLE:

A documentary series featuring musicians in New Orleans and South Louisiana who continue to perform both traditional blues and more commercial rhythm-and-blues.

Join host Richard Ziglar for a trip into the hidden world of Louisiana blues.

Louisiana’s Interstate 10 corridor between New Orleans and Lafayette has been called the “most musical 125 miles on Earth.” It is famously the birthplace of jazz, zydeco, and Cajun music, and has its own brand of funk and R&B. But New Orleans and South Louisiana also have a strong blues tradition, which exists below the radar yet provides the DNA for so much American music.

The first part, also called “Still Singing the Blues,” burrows into the lives of three outstanding older performers: Carol Fran of Lafayette, Harvey Knox of Baton Rouge, and Little Freddie King of New Orleans.

Part 2, “Crescent City Blues,” visits New Orleans’ corner blues joints–neighborhood bars far from the French Quarter that keep the music alive.

Filed under: Programs,Specials — Tags: — Jazz @ 10:50 pm

 

VOTE on November 2nd! (and elect some new programming)

Get out and vote on November 2nd!

And elect new programming options for your station.



Filed under: News,Programs,Promotions,Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — Jazz @ 3:35 pm

 

Right Wing Radio, Mobile Technology, Sonny Bono, Local Food, & Garbage Everywhere Action Speaks! 2010

The popular Action Speaks series returns with five one-hour programs looking at contemporary issues by using underappreciated dates of the twentieth-century that changed America.

Host Marc Levitt assembles a panel of scholars, artists, practitioners, and government officials, and adds archived sound and audience participation to create a lively and entertaining discussion of wide-ranging topics.

As with last year’s series, the programs can be played as stand-alone specials or as a limited series.

1998

The Sonny Bono Act
(Copyright Term Extension Act):
Protecting Mickey Mouse or Helping the ‘Beat Go On’ in the Realm of Innovation?

Action Speaks explores the complexities of copyright protection in a world of free culture, public art, technology, and cyberspace.
Issues discussed include the creative process from an artist’s standpoint, hardware and software development, and the world of public art and cyberspace.

Available:   PRX, Download

LISTEN & more information

1926
The Rise of Right Wing Radio
Father Coughlin ‘On the Air’
Father Charles Coughlin was the first nationally known conservative radio talk show host.  He addressed large rallies, established a national network of listeners, called for a return to God, and raised huge funds for his preferred causes.

Action Speaks asks how his methods, ideologies, and reach compare to those of today’s right wing jockeys.

Available: Content Depot, Download

LISTEN & more information

1971
Alice Waters Opens Chez Panisse
Local Food and the Promise of
Healthy School Lunches
The popularity of Farmers’ Markets, and Community Gardens can in many ways be traced to Alice Waters and her restaurant, Chez Panisse.  But rather than franchising her restaurants, like so many celebrity chefs did, she turned her attention to the quality of school lunch programs emphasizing fresh, locally grown food.

The Action Speaks panel looks at the economic, cultural, political, and public and private health implications of the local food movement.

Available:  Oct. 25 PRX, Download

1973
The First US Mobile Phone Call;
Always within reach!
Everyone has an opinion about cellular phones and mobile media technology that has made us simultaneously “always available,” and “never here”.

Action Speaks panelists approach the topic from ethical, philosophical, political and community activist points of view.

Available:  Nov. 1 PRX, Download

1987
The Roaming Mobro Garbage Barge;
Garbage, Garbage Everywhere!
In a classically underappreciated moment in 1987, a barge filled with New York City garbage was dragged up and down the East Coast and down into Caribbean and Mexican waters.

Action Speaks uses this event to frame contemporary issues of consumption, disposal, reuse, and what to do with the waste products from a material rich society.

Available:  Nov. 8 PRX, Download

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