Monday, December 14, 2009
DOUBLE FEATURE - Win One for the Forests & Not in my Backyard
Hugo Jabini is from Suriname's rain forest. Find out how he fought and won a judgment to stop his government from allowing Chinese logging companies from destroy the forest.
The second interview is with Rev. Robert Campbell. He shares how his community were successful in helping shut down a landfill after 30 years of fighting.
Monday, December 7, 2009
The Soul of Water
Deborah Crammer talks about how she become a kind of accidental science writer about the effects of Global Warming.
Friday, December 4, 2009
Timeless Jam
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Touchdown in Texas
LISTEN HERE to Daederick's story
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Off The Streets
15-year old Delencia unveils how she adjusting to high school after spending years on the street as a prostitute.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
A New Mission
LISTEN HERE to Chris and Jon's story
**2nd Interview**
Friday, October 30, 2009
Spotlight: The Author of Her Life
LISTEN HERE to Anita's Interview
As a successful young producer for a nationally syndicated radio program, Anita Woodley's career was well on its way. Her experiences growing up in the rich cultural environment of Oakland, California, gave her a unique voice—but she lacked the confidence to use it. She decided to take a Community Classroom Series course called “Write Your Life” and began a life-changing transformation. “It taught me to appreciate who I am and to put it into my work. I just soared!” she recalls. Anita has since taken another Friday Center course and recently won two national journalism awards.
Nurturing Monet's Garden
Elizabeth Murray recounts why quitting her dream job to work in Monet's garden in Giverny, France made her deeply appreciate his the man and the art.
Brush with Fame - Wicked Witch of the West
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
One Broken American Dream
LISTEN HERE to Zed's story
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Deep Undercover
Detective April Leatherwood shares how going undercover as a drug addict for a year altered her life.
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Looking Back to Look Forward
LISTEN HERE to Terrol's story
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Risky Beauty Business
Connie and Alisha Tran talk about how the beauty business and working around acrylic nails for years has damaged their health.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
2008 Harry Chapin Media Awards Ceremony
Friday, September 25, 2009
The Neon Man and Me
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
A "Lost Boy" No More
A "lOST BOY" NO MORE
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
New Father, New Life
Tuesday, September 15 2009
New Father, New Life
Richard Gardner
Among the many Americans searching for jobs are young, first-time fathers. Richard Gardner of Chicago says when he learned that his girlfriend was pregnant, he immediately stopped hanging out with gang members and found work as an evening janitor. Now he's attending nursing school and reaching out to other young fathers. Dick Gordon talks to him about how being raised in a two-parent home didn't deter him from gang life and what sacrifices he's made to be a positive example to his three-year-old son Richard Jr.- Learn more about Metropolitan Family Services, a group that helped Richard.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Tuning out Fear & Your story: Getting His Credentials
Friday, September 11 2009
DOUBLE FEATURE!!!
Tuning out Fear & Your story: Getting His Credentials
Vic Gregory
As America marks the 8th anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks, one Michigan teacher is still dealing with the legacy of the incident. Vic Gregory had his dream job as a drag car racer. He left that to teach auto shop at his alma mater, Fordson High School in Dearborn, Mich. The school has a high number of students from the Middle East. The day after 9/11, there was a bomb threat and school officials wondered how to keep the teenagers safe.
The teachers and the students had to redefine themselves after 9/11. These days, Vic says that his auto shop program is helping kids get jobs and feel proud of their heritage.
Your story: Getting His Credentials
Malcolm Morris
Malcolm Morris has a story of how his experience in war inspired a form of courage in later years. Malcolm was seven years old, living in London, when German bombs rained down on the city. Soon after, he got a small camera, and began shooting photographs. He tells Dick the story of the phone call he made as a grown up that changed his life, and about the time Princess Diana saved the day.
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
The Pursuit of Education
One of the new students at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine this year is Mike Mallah. For Mike, this is an achievement for his entire family - going back generations. Mike's parents lost two homes to war - first in Palestine and later Kuwait during the Gulf War. They settled in the United States and began to see a brighter future when they opened a neighborhood convenience store. Then Mike's father, Mohammed, was shot and killed in a robbing.
Mike and his mother Iman talk with Dick Gordon about how their lives changed after that. Iman went to work in the store, and Mike and his siblings set about improving their lives and the life of their family through education.
- Learn more about Mike's business
- Discover the Muslim Self-Portrait Project
Friday, August 28, 2009
Briefing Ted Kennedy
Friday, August 28 2009 - Briefing Ted Kennedy
SECOND INTERVIEW!!
Jeffrey Thomas
As Americans mourn the passing of Senator Ted Kennedy, many remember how he touched their lives.
Growing up as the son of a Mississippi preacher, Jeffrey Thomas began to notice elaborate velvet paintings of the Kennedys hanging on parishioners' walls. After graduating college he landed a job as a legislative aide to Ted Kennedy. Jeffrey says one of the most terrifying moments of his career unfolded when he forgot to pack an important memo for the senator. He tells Dick how being given a second chance redefined his career.
- See Jeffrey and Senator Kennedy at work in 1993
- Learn more about Jeffrey's work at Democracy and Education
Thursday, August 27, 2009
CLEANING UP
Thursday, August 27 2009 - Cleaning up
Jerome Boykin, top, Marcus Clemmons, below.
In the months after Hurricane Katrina, 23-year-old Jerome Boykin started his own company sweeping big box store parking lots. Four years later, his business has expanded throughout southern Louisiana, and he's now mentoring others. One of the people he's helped is Marcus Clemmons of Oakland, Calif.
The two men talk with Dick Gordon about how much it means to them to have found successful black role models for themselves, and how they are now returning the favor to others.
- See Jerome with his truck
- Learn more about Marcus and Jerome's parking lot sweeping businesses
Listen Now!
Saturday, August 8, 2009
ANOTHER AWARD-WINNING SUMMER!!
Read more about the 2008 NABJ Awards
Originally Aired: Wednesday, December 10 2008
LESSONS FROM A DROPOUT
Listen Now!
Gerrin Hayes Craig Zeno
Among many other concerns in a faltering economy is the dropout rate - in some U.S. cities, as many as half of entering freshmen fail to graduate. Policy makers say that means we'll have fewer educated minds to grapple with economic problems, and an increased burden for social services.
Twenty-year-old Gerrin Hayes just dropped out of high school. He says growing up in a crack house made it impossible to focus on studying. But Gerrin still has hope. He has a mentor, Craig Zeno, who once was a dropout himself, and he makes a strong case for the value of school.
Gerrin tells Dick Gordon why it's still important to him to earn a high school diploma. And Craig talks about how working with tough cases like Gerrin's motivates him to keep doing this work.
- Learn about the dropout assistance program where Craig works
Friday, July 24, 2009
Humble Pie
David Bailey
David Bailey was a successful food writer for airline magazines when the recession hit and he lost his job. He was 61 and had a hefty mortgage, so retirement wasn't an option. But when David searched for work, he wasn't only looking to pay the bills. He wanted to explore new ways to reinvent himself and his career.
That's when he decided to become a dishwasher at a local restaurant. It was a hard job, and David worked his way up to line cook. He talks to Janet Babin about why he's content with working behind the scenes in the restaurant business.
- Follow David's blog
Listen Now!
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Try Looking on MySpace
Crystal Riportella-Crose
Crystal Riportella-Crose was adopted when she was an infant and grew up in Vermont. As an interracial child in a Caucasian family, she always wondered what her birth mother looked like. So when she got older, she began to search for her, and eventually found her birth mother on the social networking site, MySpace.
Crystal tells Janet Babin how she ended up meeting her birth mother in person, and what that odd mix of feelings was like.
- See photos of Crystal's reunion with her birth mother
CLASSIFIED Ad Dad
Alison and Pat Keenan
Alison Keenan found a husband and a father for her children in a newspaper ad. Not that she meant to.
In 1987, Alison was newly-divorced and needed a babysitter for her two boys. She looked through the classifieds. There she saw a phone number for someone named "Pat." When Alison discovered that Pat was a man she was nervous, but she met with him anyway. He took the job and moved into their apartment immediately. Nine months later, Pat Keenan stole their hearts, married Alison and adopted the boys.
They talk with Dick Gordon about how the babysitting job turned into romance and the first Father's Day when the boys acknowledged Pat as "Dad." This story originally aired on June 13, 2008.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Over the Moon
Monday, July 20 2009 - Over the Moon
top to bottom: Bill Bussey, Chris Gember, John Polanda, Steve Gustafson (larger)
Forty years ago today, millions of people watched, transfixed, as Neil Armstrong took his first step onto the moon. Today we talk with five people who remember that moment well.
Bill Bussey was 10. His parents drove the family to Florida to watch the launch from the Kennedy Space Center - then they got in the car and drove back to Georgia to watch the moon landing on TV.
Chris Gember's father used the moon landing as an excuse to buy a color TV - even though the actual broadcast was in black and white. Chris remembers the event as one that made her realize how peaceful and unified the planet could be.
John Polodna was serving in the Army. He heard about the moon landing in the middle of a misbegotten adventure, drifting down a river in Alaska in a boat that had run out of gas.
And Steve Gustafson was in Holland, newly married to his Dutch bride. Her elderly grandmother, Oma, was convinced the whole thing was staged, filmed in an American desert like the television show High Chaparral. And if it were real, Oma was convinced the world was about to end.
Charlie Duke
We also listen back to an interview Dick Gordon recorded with the astronaut Charlie Duke. Charlie visited the moon in 1972. While walking on the lunar surface, he and a fellow astronaut held, what they called, the very first Space Olympics, including a high jump "competition." That program aired on October 20, 2006.
Listen Now!
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Two Teachers, One Out of Work
Connie and Steve Rice relocated from Southern California to work as teachers in Oregon. Both have years of experience, and they enjoyed their classrooms in Oregon. But the national budget woes have hit schools hard. First Connie was laid off, then Steve. Dick Gordon talks with both Connie and Steve about how the lack of job stability for teaching has affected their lives, and about how they heard the welcome news that Steve would be rehired.
Listen Now!
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Thinking Big
One young man has begun taking classes at Morehouse College this past school year, and he is quite an unlikely freshman. At the ago of 14, Jeremy Lee was convicted on an armed robbery charge and sentenced to four years in youth detention. However, he made up his mind to finish high school while he was locked up. The year he graduated high school, Jeremy was the only juvenile inmate to get a traditional diploma from the youth facility in Georgia.
Jeremy was accepted to Morehouse where he is majoring in biology with hopes of becoming a neurosurgeon. Jeremy talks with Dick Gordon talks about his journey from jail to higher education, and the struggle he's still facing to realize his dreams.
* Learn more about Jeremy's inspiration, Dr. Ben Carson
Listen Now!
Friday, June 19, 2009
ANITA 2008 HARRY CHAPIN MEDIA AWARD WINNER FOR RADIO!!
Wow, I just won an award that will take me to New York's Time Square in September!
The award is being presented by The Harry Chapin Foundation.
It is for a story produced in 2008 about a family who squatted in a foreclosed home after they became homeless.
Learn more about the Harry Chapin Award
http://www.whyhunger.org/programs/3-newsflash/842-harry-chapin-media-awards-winners-announced.html
HEAR THE INITIAL BROADCAST AND FOLLOWUP SHOW BELOW!!
A New Life in a Foreclosed Home
(1st INTERVIEW)Listen Now!
Rmega Tsafari - larger >> (photo by Noelle Theard)
Foreclosures nationwide have led another trend: squatting. Empty homes are increasingly occupied by people who don't own them.
Rmega Tafari and her family were homeless. Then they found a foreclosed home - an old crack house. They cleaned it up, and made a deal with a neighbor for water and electricity. Even the bank allowed them to stay, but only temporarily. It all ends on Monday - the Tafari family has been asked to leave. Rmega talks to Dick Gordon about the pressures that led her to squatting, and the uncertain future that she and her family now face.
- Rmega captured these photos inside the vacant foreclosed house they're calling home.
- Learn more about Take Back the Land, an organization that identifies vacant, foreclosed homes for the homeless.
Music heard in this story: "That Hump" by Erykah Badu for the album Amerykah Pt. 1 (4th World War)
***
Follow-up: New Life in a Foreclosed Home
(2nd INTERVIEW) * Please fast-forward
We received dozens of emails about Dick's conversation with Rmega Tafari, a woman squatting in an abandoned foreclosed home with her family. When Dick last spoke to Rmega, the bank that owned the home had asked her to leave.
Dick checks in with Rmega to find out what's happened since: she and her family have moved to Tallahassee where life is much better. Dua, Rmega's 4-year-old son, also shares his thoughts on the home they're renting and their new garden.
Monday, June 15, 2009
VASCO'S HEART & A LONG RIDE HOME
Friday, June 12 2009 -VASCO'S HEART
Vasco- - Day 1 in the U.S. >>More
When columnist Cathleen Falsani won a trip to Africa in a raffle, she planned to veer off the tourist track, do some writing. She never imagined that a young boy would steal her heart the moment he sat in her lap. Cathleen learned that the boy, Vasco, had a serious heart condition, but could not afford medical attention.
After Cathleen returned home and wrote about Vasco in her newspaper column, she found herself engaged in a massive project to bring Vasco from his home in Malawi to Chicago for a heart surgery.
Cathleen Falsani
The surgery successfully took place on Wednesday. Cathleen talks to Dick Gordon about how her relationship with Vasco has changed her life.
A LONG RIDE HOME
Chuck Walkley
You know we often turn the second half of the show over the you. We like to hear the stories that are the most remarkable in your life. Chuck Walkley's neighbor Jennifer heard Chuck's story and she told us, and we persuaded him to come in to the studio.
Chuck returned from Vietnam with a serious injury and no idea how to move forward with his life. When he got out of the hospital, he decided to hitchhike home to surprise his mother. He quickly was picked up by a state trooper who told him that hitchhiking on a highway was illegal. Then the trooper offered him a ride. Chuck was transferred from one state trooper's car to another, through thee states, until finally, sirens blaring and lights blazing, he was dropped off at his mother's door. That kindness inspired Chuck to spend the next two decades of his life as a police officer.
Listen Now!
Thursday, May 28, 2009
THE RECESSION: THE SMALLEST VICTIMS
Thursday, May 28 2009 -THE RECESSION: THE SMALLEST VICTIMS
LaWanda and JuJuan Tanniehill
School authorities in Birmingham have a couple of numbers that underline the effects of this recession in very stark terms. Officials estimate that there are more than 3,000 homeless children who attend city schools. That would mean that more than twenty percent of the children who attend Birmingham city schools are living in shelters, in hotels or with relatives.
That's what happened to LaWanda Tanniehill and her two boys, eight-year-old JuJuan and four year old Mythais. The family lived with relatives for a while, and earlier this year they were at a shelter for three months.
Listen Now!
Thursday, May 21, 2009
GRADUATING RIGHT ON TIME!
Thursday, May 21, 2009 - GRADUATING RIGHT ON TIME!
Roscoe Dillard Griffin >>Larger
Last week, 92-year-old Roscoe Dillard Griffin graduated from the University of North Carolina after leaving school seven decades earlier. At the very end of his senior year, Dillard says he left college to manage his family's shoe store. He also met a girl and fell in love. Gail Clower, Dillard's daughter, says she never knew her father didn't have a degree. The two talk with Dick Gordon about how Dillard managed to complete his final university credits, and what finishing his degree means to their family.
See Dillard's yearbook picture, and a photo of the woman who stole his heart.Listen Now!
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Teamwork in THE TRAILER PARK
Monday, May 11 2009-Teamwork in THE TRAILER PARK
Theresa Phillips
All this week, American Public Media is running a special series on a number of shows: Marketplace, Speaking of Faith, American RadioWorks. The idea is to explore The Next American Dream.
Theresa Phillips' vision of the American Dream for her children is that they are safe, regardless of the path they take in life. Her work within a trailer park women's co-op in Battle Creek, Mich., shaped that vision. Theresa says she moved to the community to escape an abusive past. To her surprise, she found many women in the same boat. So Theresa invited all the women in the trailer park to her lot to figure out how they could change their lives. Dick Gordon talks with Theresa about how helping out with childcare and food turned into a vibrant, home-grown support network, a new kind of American Dream.
Listen Now!
Friday, May 8, 2009
WHEN CAN MY WIFE COME HOME?
WHEN CAN MY WIFE COME HOME?
John and Lourdes >> more photos
John Adams found himself in the thick of the nation's immigration troubles after falling in love with a woman named Lourdes from Guatemala. A year after their marriage, John and Lourdes were at the final meeting with an immigration officer to adjust her status from illegal to resident when the officer learned that Lourdes had once been picked up on an immigration violation and had not shown up in court. Lourdes was deported.
John is now raising their two children, Alexa and Orlando, alone. John tells Dick Gordon about his plans for the future and how this experience has altered his view of America.
Listen Now!
Thursday, April 30, 2009
CREDIT COACH
Kenneth Shandy
For many Americans, economic problems begin with steep credit card rate hikes and collection notices. Kenneth Shandy helps people learn how to get out of that kind of mess.
Kenneth calls himself a credit coach. He doesn't have a graduate degree in business, but he does have personal experience. As a teenage entrepreneur, he made and spent a lot of money. He had $20,000 in debt by the time he was 20 and had to teach himself how to dig his way out.
- Learn more about Kenneth’s business
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Thanks for the Layoff
Thursday, April 23 2009 - Thanks for the Layoff
Holly Green
Thousands of Americans are now facing the question that Holly Green has faced when a job that you love just vaporizes: what do I do now?
It's harder to face when you're older. It can also be harder when you lose a senior-level job. Holly was president of a major company when she was let go. But Holly re-invented herself and she appreciates the lessons she learned during her downtime.
- Learn about Holly's company, The Human Factor, Inc.
Listen Now!
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Same-Sex Tax Woes
Clark Williams >>More
The tax deadline was yesterday. Clark Williams and his partner Jim always file their taxes, but this tax year they were presented with a challenge. They are a married, same-sex couple, so in California they file a joint return. But they had to file as singles for the federal return. Clark talks with Dick about how filing as both a married person and as a single frustrated him - and led to the loss of money.
Listen Now!
Monday, April 13, 2009
Back Home - Again
Monday, April 13, 2009 -Back Home - Again
When Tony and his wife Susan Sloan fell on hard economic times recently, they moved the whole family in with Susan's mother - Tony, Susan, their teenage son Ben, three dogs and two cats. Tony and Susan talk with Dick Gordon about the challenges of that arrangement, and why they think they've hit on a smart idea.
- Learn about Tony's hobby while laid off
Creative Job Search
Peggy Greco
Peggy Greco has always been a little nutty about the way she's pursued her career. But with this economic downturn, she's had to do something extreme. She's been riding her bicycle around town in a T-shirt that advertises her work as a private nurse.
- See Peggy's Web site
Listen Now!
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Save My Barbecue Joint
(SECOND INTERVIEW)
Wednesday, April 08 2009 -Save My Barbecue JointJonathan Childres >>More
Jonathan Childres opened his barbecue restaurant seven years ago this week. He and his business partner describe the place as a bit of a “hole in the wall,” since the kitchen is tiny and the restaurant only seats 36 people. The two say they’ve been wanting to expand their business to a larger space since they opened, and they were ready to do so - until this year, when one of their investors unexpectedly pulled out at the last minute. So, Jonathan had to think creatively about raising the extra funds. He's turned to his customers. Would you invest in a restaurant if it meant you'd get free barbecue?
Listen Now! (SECOND INTERVIEW)
Friday, April 3, 2009
Resurrecting a Neighborhood
(SECOND INTERVIEW)
Friday, April 03 2009 -Resurrecting a Neighborhood
Mark Post
During the housing boom, many Americans got into buying cheap houses and rehabbing them for profit. Over an 18-year period, Mark Post bought six homes in his neighborhood - but not to flip them. Mark had it in mind he could help make his community a better place.
When he first moved to the Cherry Hill neighborhood of Grand Rapids, M.I., Mark says many of the homes were used by drug dealers and prostitution rings at night. Today, his neighborhood is home to a diverse group of mixed-income residents and crime has gone way down. Mark talks with Dick about his role in those changes, and how he fits into debates about gentrification.
Listen Now!(SECOND INTERVIEW)
Resurrecting a Neighborhood
Friday, April 03 2009
Resurrecting a Neighborhood
Listen Now!
Mark Post
During the housing boom, many Americans got into buying cheap houses and rehabbing them for profit. Over an 18-year period, Mark Post bought six homes in his neighborhood - but not to flip them. Mark had it in mind he could help make his community a better place.
When he first moved to the Cherry Hill neighborhood of Grand Rapids, M.I., Mark says many of the homes were used by drug dealers and prostitution rings at night. Today, his neighborhood is home to a diverse group of mixed-income residents and crime has gone way down. Mark talks with Dick about his role in those changes, and how he fits into debates about gentrification.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Follow Up- Blessing in Disguise
(SECOND INTERVIEW)
Wednesday, April 1, 2009- Follow Up- Blessing in Disguise
Alice Evans
Residents of Fargo, N.D. are still waiting to see what the damage will be from last month's flooding. Alice Evans would tell them one thing: the damage can take weeks, even months to reveal itself.
Dick Gordon first spoke to Alice Evans in July just after the Cedar Rapids floods. The kitchen of her catering business was destroyed. Alice lost her business partner and then couldn't find a loan to rebuild. Now she has reason to be optimistic – Alice has reopened her catering company, “My Personal Chef.” She talks with Dick about how she found her new kitchen and how her father convinced her that the floods were a blessing in disguise.
- Learn more about Alice's Personal Chef business
- Learn the latest on efforts to Rebuild Cedar Rapids
- Hear Alice’s 1st Interview Cooking Underwater
- Hear Alice’s 2nd interview Small Business Rollercoaster
Listen Now! (SECOND INTERVIEW)
Friday, March 27, 2009
KNOCK OUT THERAPY
Stacy Nakell >>More
It takes an inner toughness to keep a job these days, and Stacy Nakell has one of the toughest jobs there is. She's a social worker. But she has an extra edge when she tells women that they can find the courage to stand up to a violent person in their lives. Stacy is a boxer in her off-hours.
Stacy had made a bet with her boyfriend when she walked into a gym for the first time. To Stacy’s surprise, competition also allowed her to confront her difficult childhood and mend a strained relationship with her father. Dick Gordon talks to Stacy about her passion for the sport of boxing and about how her time in the ring has transformed her approach to her work.
- See images from Stacy’s first bout with rival Tiffany
- See images from Stacy’s second bout with rival Tiffany
Listen Now!
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
What's Gender got to do with it?
Beverly Kennedy
Beverly Kennedy decided she wanted a career in law enforcement. The trouble was, this was the early 70's in Boston, and the cops weren't hiring women to walk a beat. Beverly didn't take "no" for an answer, and built a career defending herself and other people. Beverly talks to Dick Gordon about how a tense moment with a male colleague motivated her to become a lawyer and eventually a domestic victim service worker.
(ADVANCE TO SECOND INTERVIEW)
Listen Now!
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Tuesday, March 17 2009
Anneke Van Woundenberg
Reports suggest that war-torn regions of the Democratic Republic of Congo have recently experienced a period of calm. But people who live and work there know how tragic the situation still is. Anneke Van Woundenberg is a human rights investigator. She travels to remote villages and interviews witnesses and victims of brutal attacks. Anneke says though the witness accounts can be heartbreaking, she's still optimistic about Congo's future. She talks with Dick Gordon about her latest trip to Congo, when she met one man who saw the decimation of his village - and watched on a screen in a crowded church as the International Criminal Court prepared to try one of Congo's rebel leaders for war crimes.
- Find out the latest news in Africa through Human Rights Watch
- Learn more about Anneke Van Woudenberg