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RECOMMENDED PUBLIC BROADCASTING SERIES:
RADIO

The following public radio program series are currently available to all stations at a nominal fee or free. If your station does not carry them, this might be a place to start your group's dialog with its management.

If you contact these program producers, they will send you sample tapes and promotional materials. The tapes can serve as the focus of an educational session for your members. The whole package can be left with local station management to review for a follow-up meeting on scheduling and local promotion.

Brief descriptions, contact information and website links for the programs are listed below.

Alternative Radio
2129 Mapleton
Boulder, CO 80304
Tel: (303) 444-8788
Fax: (303) 546-0592 Maybe (303) 444-8788

ar@orci.com
Each week Alternative Radio (AR) presents perspectives and analyses on such critical topics as the environment, media, U.S. foreign policy, racism, economic and trade issues, and indigenous rights. Produced by David Barsamian, AR featured speakers include Noam Chomsky, Ralph Nader, Julianne Malveaux, Barbara Ehrenreich, and many others.
 
CounterSpin
c/o FAIR
130 West 25th Street
New York, NY 10001
Tel: (212) 633-6700
Fax: (212) 727-7668

counterspin@fair.org
Hosted by Janine Jackson, Steve Rendall, and Peter Hart, CounterSpin draws upon an international network of experts, analysts, activists, and artists. The program dissects news coverage of a wide range of issues and current events. In addition to providing an antidote to the coverage of elites that dominates mainstream media, CounterSpin exposes and highlights biased and inaccurate news, censored stories, sexist and racist media assumptions, and other items of interest.
 
Democracy Now!
PO Box 693
New York, NY 10013
(212) 431-9090
www.democracynow.org
With host Amy Goodman, Democracy Now! goes beyond the rhetoric and party politics offered by the mainstream media. Instead, it highlights grassroots efforts to enhance and ignite democracy in the U.S. It focuses on a range of issues that demand attention, from the relationship of citizens to their government to the economic realities of declining wages and standards of living for the vast majority of Americans; from the role of money in campaigns to the impact of new technologies on politics and the media.
 

Democracy Radio
1212 New York Avenue N.W., Suite 1050
Washington, D.C. 20005
Phone: 202-547-7700
Fax: 202-547-7711
info@democracyradio.org

Democracy Radio pioneered the new format of Progressive Talk and revolutionized the radio industry by demonstrating the commercial viability of this exciting new format. Democracy Radio provides the vision and seed capital necessary to launch national and local progressive programs.

In January 2004, Democracy Radio created and produced the first successful nationally-syndicated liberal radio program, The Ed Schultz Show. After growing the program to 95 stations nationwide —including 8 of the top 10 markets— Democracy Radio spun off the show in June 2005 in order to focus on developing and incubating new progressive programs.

 
Hightower Radio
Hightower & Associates
1800 West 6th Street
Austin, TX 78703
Tel: (512) 477-5588
Fax: (512) 478-8536

info@jimhightower.com
Known as "America's most popular progressive populist," host Jim Hightower believes that "the true political spectrum is not right to left, but top to bottom," and he has become a leading national voice for the 80 percent of us who no longer find ourselves even within shouting distance of those at the top. Author, radio commentator, public speaker and political sparkplug, this Texan has spent more than two decades battling Washington and Wall Street on behalf of consumers, children, working families, environmentalists, small business and just-plain-folks
 
Making Contact
National Radio Project
1714 Franklin Street, Suite 311
Oakland, California 94612
Tel: (510) 251-1332
Fax: (510) 251-1342
Email Form
The National Radio Project produces Making Contact, a 29-minute weekly program committed to investigative journalism and in-depth critical analysis which goes beyond the breaking news. Utilizing voices and perspectives rarely heard in media, Making Contact focuses on the human realities of politics, the connections between local and global events, and creative possibilities for people to engage in hopeful democratic change. Supported by independent funding sources, Making Contact is free to explore corporate connections to national and international policies, and is offered without charge, via satellite and tape, to all public radio stations.
 
Radio Nation
A project of the The Nation Institute
72 5th Avenue
New York, NY 10011
Tel: (212) 209-5447
taya@nationinstitute.org
Hosted by investigative reporter and longtime radio personality Marc Cooper. Each week, the show features lively interviews and news. RadioNation rejects cutesy formatting and cuts through the blather of mainstream news coverage to provide the real story on domestic and international politics as well as literature, art, film, music, TV and cyberspace.
 
Talk of the Nation
635 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC
20001-3753
Tel: (202) 414-2000
Fax: (202) 414-3329
totn@npr.org
Talk of the Nation joins guests and regular contributors and listeners in a discussion of the issues of the day. Host Juan Williams leads the program Monday through Thursday. Pioneering features of Talk of the Nation include the Book Club of the Air and some of the most popular reading lists on the Web.

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