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Media Releases

AMERICAN PUBLIC MEDIA TO PRESENT A WEEK OF CONCERTS FROM THE WORLD-RENOWNED BBC PROMS

Contact: Ashley Lysne
651-290-1303
alysne@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

AMERICAN PUBLIC MEDIA TO PRESENT A WEEK OF CONCERTS FROM THE WORLD-RENOWNED BBC PROMS

"Last Night of the Proms" to be broadcast live from the Royal Albert Hall on September 10

(St. Paul, Minn.) — September 1, 2005 — American Public Media is proud to bring concerts from the BBC Proms to classical music listeners in the U.S.

The Proms is the world's largest classical music festival, drawing exceptional orchestras and soloists to London for performances in the grand and historic Royal Albert Hall. For the U.S. broadcast series, we've chosen the best of the best. In the first program, one of the finest singers of her generation, Swedish soprano Anne-Sofie von Otter, will sing Gustav Mahler's quot;Rückert Lieder,quot; with Sweden's Gothenberg Symphony Orchestra. Other highlights include the annual Proms appearance by distinguished conductor Bernard Haitink, who'll lead the London Symphony Orchestra in Ravel's jazzy Piano Concerto in G, featuring soloist Hélène Grimaud. In Prom Five, the Cleveland Orchestra and Music Director Franz Welser-Mˆst will perform Mahler's "Symphony No. 3."

SEPTEMBER 10: LAST NIGHT OF THE PROMS
Saturday, September 10, brings "The Last Night of the Proms," the climactic end to the festival. In front of the most boisterous crowd to be found at a classical music concert, the BBC Symphony Orchestra and conductor Paul Daniel will explore music inspired by the sea, one of this year's Proms themes. They will be joined by outstanding soloists such as counter-tenor Andreas Scholl and guitar legend John Williams.

"The Last Night of the Proms" will be broadcast live from Royal Albert Hall. American Public Media host Brian Newhouse presents the concert and provides context for the performances.

ABOUT THE PROMS
The festival's name is short for "promenade"; at Proms concerts there's a singular feeling created by members of the audience who stand and move about on the floor of the hall, directly in front of the orchestra, throughout the entire performance.

The first Prom was presented 110 years ago in London as a way to bring classical music to the masses. Concert goers were offered popular programs, an informal atmosphere and inexpensive ticket prices. The BBC took over the festival in 1927. The Proms of today uphold the original spirit, encouraging participants to expand and enrich their classical music experiences.

TUNE IN: The BBC Proms will broadcast the week of Sept. 5-9 on stations nationwide. "The Last Night of the Proms" will be broadcast Saturday, September 10. Check local listings for time.

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AMERICAN PUBLIC MEDIA RECEIVES $2.1 MILLION FROM TIDES FOUNDATION FOR GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY DESK

Press Contacts:
Christine Coleman
Tides Foundation
415-561-6354
coleman@tides.org
www.tidesfoundation.org

Connie Stelter
American Public Media
651-290-1113
cstelter@americanpublicmedia.com
www.americanpublicmedia.org

AMERICAN PUBLIC MEDIA RECEIVES $2.1 MILLIONFROM TIDES FOUNDATION FOR GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY DESK

New editorial desk for Marketplace, nation's leading business news program, supported by Tides' Kendeda sustainability fund

San Francisco and Los Angeles, CA — August 9, 2005 — Tides Foundation (www.tidesfoundation.org) today announced that its Kendeda Sustainability Fund has awarded $2.1 million to American Public Media to support expanded news coverage and programming on global sustainability and the economy.

The grant will primarily support the creation of a new desk for American Public Media's Marketplace business programs, including Marketplace, Marketplace Morning Report, and Marketplace Money, a personal finance program. With a weekly audience of more than 8.5 million, the combined Marketplace programs have more listeners than any other business news program on television or radio.

The new editorial desk will focus on covering sustainability and the economy, including environmental, economic, technological, cultural and other factors influencing the future of humanity. Coverage will be aimed at helping the public better understand global realities that affect domestic and international economies and cultures. The grant, which will be disbursed over three years, will enable Marketplace to seek out diverse perspectives on sustainability related topics.

"Nothing is more important to the future of the economy and, ultimately, to our survival than awareness of how our actions affect global sustainability," said JJ Yore, executive producer of Marketplace and vice president, programming, for American Public Media. "Through this generous grant, we gain the resources to give these issues the attention they deserve."

"More businesses today are contemplating a 'double bottom line'—how their activities impact their profitability and the greater social good. This was almost unthinkable 20 years go," said Idelisse Malavé, executive director, Tides Foundation. "People are adopting a broader view of their activities and how their decisions today will affect all of us tomorrow. Yet this has been a neglected perspective in the news media. We are very excited to support an expanded analysis of major business trends from such a respected and independent news source."

The grant also will fund coverage of sustainability on other American Public Media programs, including American RadioWorks documentaries; Being, a program on belief, meaning, ethics and ideas; and Weekend America, a magazine show which explores lifestyle, leisure, culture and attitude.

"By providing support for sustainability coverage on these programs, the Tides Foundation grant provides a groundbreaking opportunity to reach a large and important audience," said Jon McTaggart, senior vice president and chief operating officer of American Public Media. "Our ability to serve the public will be significantly enhanced as we offer coverage on sustainability across many programs, from many perspectives and at different times of the day and week," said McTaggart.

The Kendeda Sustainability Fund, a donor-advised fund at Tides Foundation, was created in 2003 to explore how to live within the limits of the natural world in ways that promote community, equity, prosperity and health. It funds organizations in the areas of higher education, religion and faith, healthy buildings, materials and processes, and communications/media and the arts.

Through its grantmaking programs, Tides Foundation strengthens social change organizations and increases the capacity and effectiveness of the nonprofit and public sectors. It supports activities in the areas of economic and social justice, environmental sustainability and democratic renewal. In 2004, Tides Foundation awarded over $70 million to more than 2,000 nonprofit organizations.

Marketplace, produced in Los Angeles, maintains five domestic bureaus plus bureaus in London and Tokyo. The 16-year-old program has been called the best business show on radio or television by the Columbia Journalism Review, and it has won the duPont-Columbia Award and the Peabody Award.Marketplace is distributed worldwide by American Public Media. It is broadcast by more than 325 public radio stations and heard around the world via American Forces Radio & Television Service. American Public Media also makes the program available via World Radio Network (WRN), a direct broadcast satellite channel serving Europe, Asia and Africa.

About Tides Foundation
Since 1976, Tides Foundation has partnered with donors and institutions by offering donor-advised funds, philanthropic advice and management services for social change philanthropy. Tides Foundation is committed to strengthening community-based nonprofit organizations through national and global philanthropy.

Tides Foundation is a part of the Tides Organizations, a group of nonprofits that share a common vision for a healthy society—a society based on principles of social justice, broadly shared economic opportunity, a robust democratic process and sustainable environmental practices. The Tides Organizations also include Tides Center, Tides, Inc., Groundspring.org, Thoreau Center for Sustainability and Community Clinics Initiative. For more information, go to www.tidesfoundation.org.

About American Public Media
American Public Media is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 14.7 million listeners nationwide each week. Its national programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Weekend America®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Marketplace Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being® and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorksÆ. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.org.

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Source: Data are copyright Arbitron, Inc. Arbitron data are estimates only.
Fall 2004

Copyright © 2005, Tides, Tides Foundation, Tides Center, Tides, Inc., Groundspring.org, Thoreau Center for Sustainability, Community Clinics Initiative. Other names used in this press release may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Backgrounder

Expanded Coverage of Sustainability at American Public Media

WHAT?
The $2.1 million, three-year grant from the Kendeda Sustainability Fund of the Tides Foundation will support expanded coverage of sustainability on American Public Media (APM) public radio programs Marketplace, Marketplace Morning Report and Marketplace Money, Being and Weekend America, as well as in documentaries produced by APM's American RadioWorks.

WHY?
Sustainability can be broadly defined as policies, practices, and perspectives aimed at supplying the present without compromising the future. It merits a distinct Marketplace desk because it is no longer a concern of environmental groups alone. It's a topic of growing interest for corporations, business schools, university science departments, theological seminaries, entrepreneurs and consumer groups, among others.

Sustainability is a broad news beat, encompassing natural and economic resource management, agriculture, technology, ecology and economics, law, policy, diplomacy and taxation and embracing spirituality, religion and social philosophy.

HOW?
The grant will fund two levels of expanded coverage:

* Creation of a ìMarketplace Sustainability Desk,î which will generate regular features and spot news stories on sustainability as seen through the lens of business, money, and personal finance. Topics of likely coverage include:

  • Corporate innovations — technical, philosophical and administrative
  • New market niches — for consumer products, alternative process, resources
  • Government policies
  • International treaties and conventions
  • Opinions, attitudes and values — by consumers, pundits, business leaders
  • Ethical and faith-based issues and answers
  • Architecture and design
  • Urban planning

* Enhanced, in-depth reporting on topics related to sustainability on APM programs Weekend America and Being and in American RadioWorks documentaries. Coverage by these programs will bring different approaches to and introduce diverse perspectives in the exploration of sustainability issues. In addition, because these programs serve different audiences, their coverage will expose the topic of sustainability to a broader audience. Examples of the coverage on these programs might include:

  • Weekend America (http://weekendamerica.publicradio.org/): How lifestyle, technology, trends and the environment affect issues of sustainability.
  • American RadioWorks (http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/): Sustainable extraction; scavenger culture and what can be learned from it and how chemicals, such as flame retardants in computers and sofa cushions, are accumulating in human bodies and animal species worldwide.
  • Being (http://being.publicradio.org/): The intersection of such sustainability issues as religious environmentalism, alternative visions of a sustainable society, and the integration of traditional Hindu practices in today's emerging global high-tech industry in Bangalore.

ALSOÖ
The grant will enable Marketplace and the other APM programs to augment their sustainability coverage through the use of:

  • New Media: including a web site that will serve as a repository for information, contacts and calendars on sustainability topics and, later, interactive simulations.
  • Public Insight Journalism, an approach to reporting developed by American Public Media that uses a wide and diverse database of sources with expertise in specific disciplines, as well as online collaborative tools, to tap knowledge and insight from the audience.

WHO?

  • Margaret Koval will be editor of the Marketplace Sustainability Desk. She currently is the program's Washington desk editor and also serves as a domestic features editor.
  • The Marketplace sustainability reporter will be hired after a nationwide search. In the interim, Sam Eaton will report for the desk.

WHEN?Marketplace listeners will begin to hear the expanded sustainability coverage made possible by the Tides Foundation grant early this fall.

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AMERICAN PUBLIC MEDIA'S Being RECEIVES MAJOR FUNDING FROM THE FORD FOUNDATION

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

AMERICAN PUBLIC MEDIA'S Being RECEIVES MAJOR FUNDING FROM THE FORD FOUNDATION

(St. Paul, Minn.) July 7, 2005 - In recognition of its extraordinary achievement as public radio's national conversation on belief, meaning and ethics, the American Public Media program Being has been awarded a $275,000 grant from the Ford Foundation's Religion and Culture Initiative. The funds will support production of radio and Internet programming that illuminates the many dynamics of religious pluralism in the United States and internationally.

Constance Buchanan, senior program officer for Religion at the Ford Foundation, said of Being's ground-breaking coverage of religion and ethics in public life: "We are proud to support Being, which each week brings to public radio something all too rare - thoughtful, in-depth discussion of questions of meaning and morality that enrich the national debate about religion and values. By featuring familiar as well as new voices, the program helps us learn about the diverse theological and ethical traditions that are changing America's religious landscape, and takes us deeper into the variety of ways we and others make sense of our lives, society and the universe."

Being recently celebrated its second year of weekly, national production. The program is carried on 116 stations nationwide, including eight of the top 10 radio markets.

The program's creator and host, Krista Tippett, said the Ford Foundation grant will allow Being to cover a wider range of both domestic and international topics and issues, and that support from Ford is particularly meaningful at this stage in the program's development: "Our goal has been to create a new model of journalism about religion and ethics that introduces exciting and unfamiliar voices to the public discussion, demonstrates that intelligent conversation is possible on some of the most contentious issues before us, and illuminates the complexity of religion in American life and the world. This significant support from the Ford Foundation is extremely gratifying."

The Ford Foundation is an independent, nonprofit grant-making organization. For more than half a century it has been a resource for innovative people and institutions worldwide, guided by its goals of strengthening democratic values, reducing poverty and injustice, promoting international cooperation and advancing human achievement. With headquarters in New York, the foundation has offices in Africa, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America and Russia.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 14.7 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home CompanionÆ, Weekend AmericaÆ, Saint Paul SundayÆ, MarketplaceÆ, Marketplace MoneyÆ, The Splendid TableÆ, BeingÆ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorksÆ. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public RadioÆ. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.org.

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Source: Data are copyright Arbitron, Inc. Arbitron data are estimates only. Fall 2004

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Press Release Press Release

GARRISON KEILLOR TO STAR IN ROBERT ALTMAN FILM

Contact: Amanda Stanton-Geddes
Prairie Home Productions
Phone: (651) 999-1095
astanton@mpr.org

GARRISON KEILLOR TO STAR IN ROBERT ALTMAN FILM
Major motion picture will be shot in St. Paul.

(St. Paul, Minn) June 24, 2005 — The feature is still untitled. But the screenplay - written by Garrison Keillor - is ready to go, and the cast and crew of famed director Robert Altman's town hall meetings, international call-ins, investigative reports, commentaries and cultural programs — as well as an interactive Web site in partnership with the nonprofit organization NetAid.

It's a stellar cast: Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin, Lindsay Lohan, Kevin Kline, Woody Harrelson, John C. Reilly, Virginia Madsen, Maya Rudolph and, of course, Garrison Keillor.

Keillor has fashioned a comic fable. As the story unfolds, the players, performers and presiding pooh-bah of a long-running live radio variety show discover that this evening may be the program's LAST. Long-simmering passions, feuds, misunderstandings and assorted other human complications come to a head. A love affair - or two - comes to light. A dangerous and beautiful woman - who just might be the Angel of Death - haunts the wings. A teenage girl takes the stage in the very spot her mother had long held. There is backstage gossip, dressing room rivalries and a lot of engaging music.

The film's characters include GARRISON KEILLOR as himself; YOLANDA and RHONDA JOHNSON (Meryl Streep and Lily Tomlin), the last two of what was once a five-sister country music act; Yolanda's daughter, MELISSA (Lindsay Lohan); and the singing cowboys DUSTY and LEFTY (Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly). There is DONNA (Prairie Home regular Sue Scott), the make-up artist, and the DANGEROUS WOMAN (Virginia Madsen), who mysteriously materializes backstage. And there's GUY NOIR (Kevin Kline), the show's security guard, who seems to have stepped right out of a Raymond Chandler novel. An imperious STAGE MANAGER (Prairie Home's Tim Russell) and his assistant, ERICA (Maya Rudolph), try their best to keep an increasingly rudderless show on course.

Keillor holds sway over all of this - hosting the show from the stage, refereeing (and occasionally provoking) disputes and quibbles in the dressing rooms and in the wings. And through it all, the show must go on.

FILMMAKER'S BIOS

Garrison Keillor

One of America's most beloved radio hosts and acclaimed humorists, Garrison Keillor has been the host of A Prairie Home Companion since 1974 and of The Writer's Almanac since 1996. A noted author, Garrison has written more than a dozen books, including Lake Wobegon Days, The Book of Guys, Love Me and Homegrown Democrat. He has been honored with numerous awards for his contributions to radio, television and literature, including the National Humanities Medal in 1999 and election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Robert Altman

Throughout his extraordinary career, Robert Altman has surprised, entertained and challenged audiences with vibrant, freewheeling films that stretch the boundaries of the medium.

Altman's more than 30 features bear witness to an extraordinary creative range: from M*A*S*H to Nashville, from The Player to Gosford Park. He has inverted, satirized and enriched genres like the western (McCabe and Mrs. Miller), the gangster melodrama (Thieves Like Us), the detective film (The Long Goodbye), the biography (Vincent and Theo) and the English drawing-room whodunnit (Gosford Park). His source material has included comics (Popeye), the theater (Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean and Streamers), contemporary politics (Tanner '88) and contemporary literature (Short Cuts).

While his subjects and themes have been diverse, Altman has often cast an irreverent eye on the institutions, mores and foibles of American life, matching that with an encompassing, unsentimental humanism.

Altman has received five Academy Award nominations for Best Director (Gosford Park, Short Cuts, The Player, M*A*S*H and Nashville) and three for Best Film (M*A*S*H, Nashville and Gosford Park).

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Public Radio's Popular Marketplace Program to Add Personal Finance Show July 1

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 646-8791
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

Public Radio's Popular Marketplace Program to Add Personal Finance Show July 1

From wallet to Wall Street, Marketplace Money offers hot tips, simple tools and savvy investment advice in the signature Marketplace style and wit

(Los Angeles) — May 5, 2005 — American Public Media announced today it is adding the personal finance program Marketplace Money to its group of Marketplace offerings beginning July 1, 2005. Marketplace Money (formerly Sound Money) will complement the highly esteemed business programs, Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report, extending the popular business program to the weekend and to personal finance.

"Marketplace Money has been more than a year in the making," said executive producer and programming vice president J.J. Yore. "And with a new host, a new staff, a new sound and now a new name that reflects our relationship with Marketplace, we hope that Marketplace Money will help listeners take charge of their financial lives — and have fun learning how to do it."

Marketplace Money will be hosted by Kai Ryssdal. Among the program's new and revamped features:

  • "The Mailbag": In a series of revealing, intimate, and often fun conversations, Ryssdal and Economics Editor Chris Farrell talk with listeners about money. The topics range broadly from how to react when you discover that your fiancé "forgot" to tell you about the huge debt he owes to how to get your kids to manage their money.

  • "The Straight Story with Chris Farrell": Economics Editor Farrell cuts through the media hype and sets the record straight on that week's financial news.

  • "Money Matters": A weekly look at major topics affecting our wallets: investing, saving, consumer choices and careers. The segment ends with practical action steps.

  • "Educating Rico": A fun, first person look at basic financial issues that everyone needs to understand.

  • "A Day in the Work Life": A profile of the myriad of ways individuals trade their time for money. Offers insight into the working lives of different professions.

Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report broadcast weekdays on more than 325 public radio stations nationwide to more than 8.1 million listeners. Over the past year while changes in style, tone and form have been made to Sound Money to prepare for the launch of the Marketplace Money name, the program's audience grew by 30 percent, according to Arbitron fall 2004 data.

"Marketplace Money is a great new addition to public radio," said Yore. "With the staff of Marketplace behind us, we have incredible expertise. We provide listeners practical information, but do it in a fun and engaging way. And we understand that public radio listeners see money not as an end in itself, but a way to have a better, more fulfilling life. Marketplace Money helps them do that and have fun at the same time."

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 14.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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American Public Media's Being Wins Prestigious Webby Award

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 646-8791
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

American Public Media's Being Wins Prestigious Webby Award

Weekly public radio program is recognized for Web site content, vision and creativity

(St. Paul, Minn.) — May 5, 2005 — American Public Mediaís Being — a public radio program and national conversation about belief, meaning, ethics and ideas — has won a Webby award.

Often referred to as the "Oscar of the Internet," the international award honors Web sites dedicated to the creative, technical and professional progress of the Internet. Being won the Webby in the "Religion and Spirituality" category.

Created and designed by Being Web Producer Trent Gilliss, www.speakingoffaith.org, offers a comprehensive guide to each week's radio program, with detailed background and insight, images, Web-exclusive features, as well as stunning visual design.

Krista Tippett, creator and host of the award-winning weekly radio program, congratulated Gilliss on his achievement. "Trent is an essential member of the Being team. He has created a Web site that enhances the program's content and extends its impact exponentially. We are extremely proud of his vision, creativity, and hard work."

More than 4,300 Web sites were entered from 50 states nationwide. The international Webby awards honor excellence in Web design, creativity, usability and functionality. The Webby awards are presented by The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.

Being is distributed by American Public Media to 115 public radio stations around the country, including eight of the top 10 radio markets. Each week, the program focuses on a different theme, asking writers, thinkers and theologians to discuss how religion shapes everyday life.

American RadioWorks, the documentary unit of American Public Media, was also nominated for two awards in news and radio categories.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 14.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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Public Radio's Popular Marketplace Program to Add Personal Finance Show July 1

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 646-8791
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

Public Radio's Popular Marketplace Program to Add Personal Finance Show July 1

From wallet to Wall Street, Marketplace Money offers hot tips, simple tools and savvy investment advice in the signature Marketplace style and wit

(Los Angeles) — May 5, 2005 — American Public Media announced today it is adding the personal finance program Marketplace Money to its group of Marketplace offerings beginning July 1, 2005. Marketplace Money (formerly Sound Money) will complement the highly esteemed business programs, Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report, extending the popular business program to the weekend and to personal finance.

"Marketplace Money has been more than a year in the making," said executive producer and programming vice president J.J. Yore. "And with a new host, a new staff, a new sound and now a new name that reflects our relationship with Marketplace, we hope that Marketplace Money will help listeners take charge of their financial lives — and have fun learning how to do it."

Marketplace Money will be hosted by Kai Ryssdal. Among the program's new and revamped features:

  • "The Mailbag": In a series of revealing, intimate, and often fun conversations, Ryssdal and Economics Editor Chris Farrell talk with listeners about money. The topics range broadly from how to react when you discover that your fiancé "forgot" to tell you about the huge debt he owes to how to get your kids to manage their money.

  • "The Straight Story with Chris Farrell": Economics Editor Farrell cuts through the media hype and sets the record straight on that week's financial news.

  • "Money Matters": A weekly look at major topics affecting our wallets: investing, saving, consumer choices and careers. The segment ends with practical action steps.

  • "Educating Rico": A fun, first person look at basic financial issues that everyone needs to understand.

  • "A Day in the Work Life": A profile of the myriad of ways individuals trade their time for money. Offers insight into the working lives of different professions.

Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report broadcast weekdays on more than 325 public radio stations nationwide to more than 8.1 million listeners. Over the past year while changes in style, tone and form have been made to Sound Money to prepare for the launch of the Marketplace Money name, the program's audience grew by 30 percent, according to Arbitron fall 2004 data.

"Marketplace Money is a great new addition to public radio," said Yore. "With the staff of Marketplace behind us, we have incredible expertise. We provide listeners practical information, but do it in a fun and engaging way. And we understand that public radio listeners see money not as an end in itself, but a way to have a better, more fulfilling life. Marketplace Money helps them do that and have fun at the same time."

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 14.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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Press Release Press Release

THINK GLOBAL: PUBLIC RADIO PRODUCERS UNITE TO LEAD A WORLDWIDE CONVERSATION ON LIVING IN A GLOBAL SOCIETY

Contact: Suzanne Perry
(651) 646-8791
suzanneper@msn.com
www.americanpublicmedia.org

THINK GLOBAL: PUBLIC RADIO PRODUCERS UNITE TO LEADA WORLDWIDE CONVERSATION ON LIVING IN A GLOBAL SOCIETY

Public radio stations nationwide will broadcast documentaries, features, commentaries, global call-ins and public forums on topics ranging from the environment and economics to migration and music

May 16-22 on the air; www.thinkglobal2005.org online

(St. Paul, Minn) April 26, 2005 — A coalition of public radio stations, networks and independent producers announce plans today to spark a global conversation on America's place in an increasingly interconnected world.

The week of special coverage, "Think Global," will air on public radio stations across the country from May 16-22. Highlights will include documentaries, feature reports, town hall meetings, international call-ins, investigative reports, commentaries and cultural programs — as well as an interactive Web site in partnership with the nonprofit organization NetAid.

"The adage says 'think global, act local,' but that's not so easy anymore," said Bill Buzenberg, executive producer of the project and senior vice president for news at American Public Media, the national production and distribution arm of Minnesota Public Radio. "Where we work, what we wear, what we eat, how we communicate — almost everything we do is part of a complex web of global interactions. How does that web work? Where do we fit in? This week of special coverage will help listeners connect the dots — locally, nationally and internationally."

"Think Global," the third annual Public Radio Collaboration, will help listeners understand China's growing economic influence; the impact of free trade on poor countries; the role of oil in international politics; and "glocalization," or the tailoring of global products and media coverage to local markets. It will introduce them to filmmakers in Uganda, members of a fair-trade coffee cooperative in Mexico, Internet-based election monitors in Kyrgyzstan and a Japanese tofu maker.

Acclaimed public radio programs such as National Public Radio's Talk of The Nation and On the Media, Public Radio International's The World and Studio 360 and American Public Mediaís Marketplace and Being will air special programs as part of the "Think Global" week.

More than 200 stations have signed up to produce and/or broadcast "Think Global" programs. For more information about programs that will be airing in your market, contact your local public radio station.

Program highlights include:

LIVE GLOBAL CALL-IN. Listeners from around the world will discuss the impact of globalization on their lives by telephone, e-mail or text messaging from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. Eastern Time, Saturday, May 21. The call-in will be hosted by Robin Lustig of the BBC's "Talking Point," Dick Gordon of Boston station WBUR's "The Connection" and Larry Mantle of Los Angeles station KPCC's "AirTalk."

THOMAS FRIEDMAN AT THE FITZGERALD THEATER. New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize winner Thomas Friedman speaks to a live audience in St. Paul about his latest book, "The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century." (Recorded for broadcast by American Public Media.)

DOCUMENTARIES.

  • "The Cost of Corruption" explores the role of corruption in the hyper-competitive global marketplace, with reports from Peru, Sao Tome and the Republic of Georgia. (Produced by American RadioWorks, the documentary unit of American Public Media, and BBC Current Affairs.)

  • "Global 3.0" takes listeners from Pittsburgh to China to India to Bangladesh to show how the high-speed movement of goods, people, capital and ideas is transforming everyday life. (Produced by American RadioWorks; co-hosted by ABC News correspondent Robert Krulwich.)

  • "Security Check: Confronting Today's Global Threats." David Brancaccio of public television's NOW hosts a program that examines the health and security threats that are side effects of globalization. (Produced by the Stanley Foundation and San Francisco station KQED.)

  • "America Up Close" examines the harsh realities of America's globalized economy, from the perspective of our neighbor to the north. (Produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.)

  • "Feet in Two Worlds: Immigrants in a Global City." Frank McCourt, author of the book "Angela's Ashes," narrates a program about Haitian, Ecuadorian, Polish, African and South Asian immigrants in New York. (Produced by New York station WNYC.)

  • "China's World: Competing for Commerce" and "China's World: Partnering With the Giant." The first report looks at the impact of China's textile production on Romania and France and assesses India's potential to match China's growing economic might. The second shows how Kazakhstan and Argentina are tapping into China's import market to speed their economic development. (Hosted by Lisa Mullins, anchor of PRI's The World. Produced by The World and BBC World Service.)

  • "Worlds of Difference: Finding a Niche" looks at how traditional societies are responding to dramatic changes in Newfoundland, Scotland's Outer Hebrides, a small Mexican town and an Andean village. (Produced by Homelands Productions and NPR; commentary by Nobel laureate Amartya Sen and National Geographic explorer Wade Davis.)

INTERNATIONAL FORUM. A live audience in Amsterdam discusses U.S. challenges to the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. (Produced by NPR's Justice Talking and Radio Netherlands.)

COMMENTARIES. Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, author of "Globalization and Its Discontents"; former Irish President and UN Commissioner of Human Rights Mary Robinson; environmentalist and author Bill McKibben; former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo; Pico Iyer, author of "The Global Soul" and "Sun After Dark"; and Roger Cohen, author of The Globalist column for the International Herald Tribune, offer contrasting commentaries about the benefits and drawbacks of globalization.

THE ENVIRONMENT. New Dimensions World Broadcasting talks to scientists, native elders, business leaders and thinkers about how to follow nature's lead to protect our planet's health. The Earth & Sky radio series explores how humans and natural systems interact on a global scale. Round Earth Productions examines the ways NAFTA has affected Mexico's environment.

MUSIC AND CULTURE. World Café, the contemporary music program produced by Philadelphia station WXPN, will feature cellist Yo Yo Ma and his cross-cultural Silk Road Ensemble, along with Benin-born world music superstar Angelique Kidjo. National Public Radio's Performance Today during the Collaboration week will examine how rhythms and melodies from nearly every corner of the planet infuse the music played in concert halls, with studio visits by some of the world's best musicians. "Music and Nature," the first program produced under American Public Media's Classical Music Initiative, offers sounds from Samoa, the Florida Everglades, Thailand and elsewhere as it explores the way music reflects our changing relationship with the environment. Studio 360, the weekly program hosted by Kurt Andersen and produced by WNYC and PRI, investigates the impact of commerce on global culture.

WEB SITE

The "Think Global" Web site at www.thinkglobal2005.org will include:

  • Audio, text and images for each of the radio programs.

  • Interactive elements produced by NetAid, a nonprofit organization that fights global poverty. Visitors can take part in quizzes, polls and multimedia activities, as well as find information on volunteering, curriculum plans and tips on how to communicate with leaders about globalization issues. The site can also be found at www.netaid.org/public-radio.

  • A "Think Global Data Bank" of facts and quotes and an animated slide show of global images; operated by The Globalist, www.theglobalist.com, a daily online feature service about globalization.

Background

"Think Global" is the third Public Radio Collaboration uniting radio producers nationwide for special coverage around a theme. In November 2003, "Whose Democracy Is It?" included 34 hours of programming and aired on more than 230 public radio stations, reaching more than 24 million listeners. The first Collaboration, in September 2002, was "Understanding America after 9/11."

Major funding for "Think Global" is provided by The Ford Foundation, Surdna Foundation and Rockefeller Brothers Fund. Programs are distributed by American Public Media and PRX, the Public Radio Exchange.

Stations and networks leading the effort include American Public Media, National Public Radio, Public Radio International, WNYC (New York) and KQED (San Francisco). International broadcasters including the BBC, Canada's CBC and Radio Netherlands also play major roles.

The project leaders are Executive Producer Bill Buzenberg, senior vice president for news at American Public Media; Project Director Betsy Gardella, former executive vice president and chief operating officer at WNYC; and Editorial Director Jonathan Miller, a veteran international journalist and a producer for radio documentary cooperative Homelands Productions.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 14.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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American Public Media, Nation's Second Largest Public Radio Company, Announces It Now Serves 14.6 Million Listeners Each Week, a 14 Percent Audience Increase

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

American Public Media, Nation's Second Largest Public Radio Company, Announces It Now Serves 14.6 Million Listeners Each Week, a 14 Percent Audience Increase

(St. Paul, Minn.) April 11, 2005 — American Public Media announced today that the number of listeners tuning into its national radio programming and to the regional radio stations operated by its affiliate companies was up 14 percent in Fall 2004 from Fall 2003. Total estimated weekly audience for programming produced by American Public Media, reported by Arbitron Nationwide, was more than 14.6 million listeners, making it the second largest producer of public radio programming after National Public Radio in Washington, D.C.

American Public Media produces a range of popular radio programs, including Marketplace, Marketplace Morning Report, Sound Money, A Prairie Home Companion, The Splendid Table, Being and Weekend America. These programs are heard on over 700 public radio stations across the country. Fall 2004 audience estimates show that total weekly audiences served by American Public Media's affiliated stations grew to 28.5 million listeners.

The estimate for total listeners for Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report, programs that cover "business for the rest of us," was more than 8.7 million, up more than 9 percent from 2003. Marketplace continues to have the largest audience of any broadcast business program on radio or television. A Prairie Home Companion had an estimated 4.3 million listeners each week, an increase of 5 percent.

Significant increases in listeners were reported for Being (155 percent), Sound Money (31 percent), The Splendid Table (17 percent) and Marketplace Morning Report (16 percent).

American Public Media Group's regional public radio companies include Minnesota Public Radio and Southern California Public Radio. Among Minnesota Public Radio's regional stations, significant audience growth was also reported. Minnesota Public Radio produces news, arts and culture and classical music programming for 37 regional radio stations. At Southern California Public Radio, which broadcasts on KPCC-FM in Los Angeles, the estimated weekly audience increased 8 percent.

"The Fall 2004 Arbitron ratings report is the first available for our national programs since launching American Public Media last summer, and weíre pleased with the results," said Bill Kling, president and CEO of American Public Media Group, the parent company of Minnesota Public Radio, Southern California Public Radio and American Public Media. "This increase in audience suggests we are providing programming that attracts listeners. But while the numbers are gratifying, they also remind us that we must continue to innovate if we are to keep building audience and contribute to our affiliate stations'success."

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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Minnesota Public Radio News to Air One-Hour Radio Special "What Happened at Red Lake?"; Discovering New Details in Monday's Tragic School Shooting in Northern Minnesota

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

Minnesota Public Radio News to Air One-Hour Radio Special "What Happened at Red Lake?"; Discovering New Details in Monday's Tragic School Shooting in Northern Minnesota

Program to Broadcast on Public Radio Stations Nationwide Friday

WHAT: Minnesota Public Radio News from American Public Media created a national radio special about the Red Lake Indian reservation shooting in northern Minnesota, a tragedy that reverberated far beyond the boundaries of Red Lake.

The hour-long special will detail the chronology of the shooting, what's known about the student who killed nine people and himself and what makes this sovereign Indian community different from other communities. The special will also examine Monday's shooting within the context of other school shootings.

  • Members of Red Lake Indian Reservation community

  • Emergency personnel who responded to the scene

  • Grief counselors who have dealt with similar type situations

WHO: The Minnesota Public Radio News special, from American Public Media, will be produced by Catherine Winter of the documentary unit American RadioWorks. Minnesota Public Radio News' Cathy Wurzer will host the program.

TUNE-IN: The special will air on Minnesota Public Radio's news and information stations noon-1 p.m. Friday, March 25, during Midday, and at 10-11 a.m. Saturday, March 26, and can be heard on all Minnesota Public Radio news and information stations, including KNOW 91.1 FM in the Twin Cities.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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American RadioWorks, American Public Media's National Documentary Unit, Takes Listeners Inside a Supermax Prison Where the Nation's Toughest Gangs Control Crime Far Beyond Prison Walls

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

American RadioWorks, American Public Media's National Documentary Unit, Takes Listeners Inside a Supermax Prison Where the Nation's Toughest Gangs Control Crime Far Beyond Prison Walls

"Locked Down: Gangs in the Supermax" airs beginning late March

(Los Angeles) March 22, 2005 — American RadioWorks (ARW), the national documentary unit of American Public Media, has produced a new radio and Internet documentary, "Locked Down: Gangs in the Supermax," that explores the rise of powerful prison gangs and their impact on street crime.

Supermax prisons were designed 20 years ago to incapacitate violent criminals by locking them in stark isolation for more than 23 hours a day, often for years on end. But as ARW reports, some of America's most violent prison gangs have their headquarters at supermaxes. In this documentary, ARW reports from inside one of the nationís biggest supermaxes — California's Pelican Bay State Prison.

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the U.S. prison population grew to more than 2 million in 2005. Recent surveys estimate that more than 300,000 gang members are currently behind bars. ARW's "Locked Down: Gangs in the Supermax" features interviews with current and former prison gang members and prison officials. The documentary explores:

  • Insiders' accounts of how prison gangs execute their orders on the streets from behind prison walls.

  • The effectiveness of isolating prisoners without any access to rehabilitation programs.

  • How harsh conditions in the supermax compel some inmates to renounce the gangs and cooperate with investigators — risking their lives.

TUNE IN: Produced by American RadioWorks' Michael Montgomery, and hosted by Deborah Amos, the one-hour documentary, "Locked Down: Gangs in the Supermax," will air on public radio stations in late March.

WEB SITE: Visit www.americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/prisongangs for a transcript and audio of the documentary, along with photos and extended interviews with inmates, ex-gang members and prison officials.

American RadioWorks is the documentary unit of American Public Media. ARW is public radio's largest documentary production unit; it creates documentaries, series projects, and investigative reports for the public radio system and the Internet. ARW is based in St. Paul, Minn., with staff journalists in Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Calif., and Durham, N.C.

"Locked Down: Gangs at the Supermax" was produced by American RadioWorks in cooperation with the Center for Investigative Reporting. Major funding for American RadioWorks comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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American Public Media's Weekend America Names Amanda Aronczyk as New York-Based Arts Reporter and Editor

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

American Public Media's Weekend America Names Amanda Aronczyk as New York-Based Arts Reporter and Editor

(Los Angeles) March 8, 2005 — American Public Media's Weekend America is pleased to announce the addition to its staff of Amanda Aronczyk, as its New York-based Arts Reporter/Editor. She will begin Monday, April 4.

Most recently, Ms. Aronczyk was a producer for WNYC's national culture program The Next Big Thing.

A dual American and Canadian citizen, Ms. Aronczyk was educated at Concordia and McGill Universities in Canada. She has studied art history at the University of California at Berkeley and film at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She worked for CBC Radio in Montreal as an independent producer and contributed to ArtTalks, a Quebec arts and culture program, and served as literature correspondent for Brave New Waves, a national new music program. She also served as an audio engineer at the Banff Centre for the Arts in Alberta.

Amanda has worked on sound-based performances and installations and a comedy pilot as well as a recording engineer and sound editor for feature films and CDs. She has also been a contributor to PRI's national arts journal Studio 360, the Public Radio Collaboration and WNYC's Morning Edition.

Funding for Weekend America is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and Minnesota Public Radio. Station Partners include WBUR, Boston; WCPN, Cleveland; KPCC, Los Angeles; WMFE, Orlando; KUOW, Seattle and KNOW, St. Paul.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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American Public Media Collaborates with Best-Selling Author James McBride

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

American Public Media Collaborates with Best-Selling Author James McBride

(Los Angeles) February 16, 2005 — Best-selling African American author and musician James McBride is collaborating with American Public Media and its new national program, Weekend America, to pilot a new urban variety public radio program named The Corner. The program will be staged and recorded on February 22 in New York.

"This is an outstanding opportunity for American Public Media to partner with a triple-threat creative genius," said Executive Producer Jim Russell. "James McBride is a gifted author, composer and musician — with a unique view of the city where he grew up and the people who populated it."

The program is about five fictional characters who hang out at a Brooklyn corner store all day and pontificate about life. They include the storeís owner, Miss Woo; the grumpy black old man, Bone; his best friend, Dub; the Big Chain Store clerk, Mrs. Frenchie; and the store clerk, Puerto Rico. A variety of wild and interesting urban visitors will pass through the corner, including authors, entertainers, comedians, musicians, bums and anyone else who has something to say because, as McBride says, the corner is ìwhere everybody gets to solo. Everybody gets their 16 bars.î The pilot episode includes vignettes such as ìPhoto Opportunity,î where Vice President Dick Cheney plans a visit to the ghetto, a re-enactment of the movie Titanic with a ghetto cast, and the moving story of Little Kevin, a young boy who befriends an elderly, reclusive white man in the neighborhood.

The program is narrated by McBride, who begins by remembering his childhood:

"When I was a boy growing up in New York, there was a place in my neighborhood where folks gathered to talk, squawk, gossip and scheme. They sipped triple sweet lemonade and slipped into the basement for mason jars of something stronger. When the joy juice got 'em loose, they hollered out tall tales and swapped lies. It was a place where you could let your hair down, or even take it off all together if you wanted, and laugh till you cried or your troubles disappeared. It was a grocery store that doubled as a barber shop, shine stand and part-time church; where penny candy cost a nickel, cigarettes cost a dime. The advice was free. We called it The Corner.î

"My mother used to say that if you stood on that corner and closed your eyes you could hear the whole world passing by."

McBride and the acting/singing troupe will record the pilots in New York City on February 22, as segments to be premiered on APM's new national Saturday program, Weekend America. In the program, listeners will hear humorous vignettes, doo-wop music and swinging jazz, sung by the show's five main characters, accompanied by some of New York's finest jazz players. American Public Media will also use the pilot segments as demonstrations of the full-length weekly urban variety program it would like to produce with McBride, assuming that funding can be secured.

James McBride's The Color of Water was on the New York Times bestseller list for more than two years. It has sold more than 1.8 million copies in the United States alone. His second book, Miracle at St. Anna, is a historical novel. He is a former staff writer for the Boston Globe, People and The Washington Post. In addition to his books, McBride has written songs for the likes of Anita Baker, Grover Washington Jr., and received several awards for his work in musical theater composition, including The Stephen Sondheim Award and the ASCAP Richard Rodgers Horizons Award.

James McBride is a native New Yorker. He studied composition at The Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Ohio and received a masters degree in Journalism from Columbia University in New York at age 22.

Executive Producer of The Corner is Jim Russell. Managing producer is Laurie Selik. Christine Tschida is consulting producer and Dan Rowles is radio line producer/director.

General manager of the pilot is Donna Trinkoff. Creator, head writer, composer and host is James McBride. Additional writing by Ed Shockley. Music director is Lafayette Harris. Choral director and arranger is Cathy Elliott. Casting by Stephanie Klapper. Sound engineer is Jonathan Duckett. Production coordinator is Samantha Grabler.

Actors include Kent C. Jackman, Pearl Sun, Kimberly Hébert-Gregory, Michael Mandell and Clarke Thorell. Musicians include: Damon Due White (drums), Konrad Adderly (bass), William (Bill) Easley (reeds), Howard Johnson (multi-instrumentalist) and Keith Robinson (guitar).

Funding for Weekend America is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and Minnesota Public Radio. Station Partners include WBUR, Boston; WCPN, Cleveland; KPCC, Los Angeles; WMFE, Orlando; KUOW, Seattle and KNOW, St. Paul.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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Public Radio's Being Presents "Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Public Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr"

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

Public Radio's Being Presents
"Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Public Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr"

Radio and Web project to document boundary-crossing
theologian and public policy shaper February 10-16

National Endowment of Humanities funds Being special program,
with expanded Web site and resources for public radio listeners and educators

(St. Paul, Minn.) February 2, 2005 — In the mid-20th century, Reinhold Niebuhr was consulted by Supreme Court justices, cold war strategists and poets. No religious figure since has taken his place as an influential, boundary-crossing theological voice in American life. Niebuhr challenged Christians as often as he consoled them, and was taken seriously by religious Americans and atheists alike.

Exploring his wide appeal, "Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Public Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr" will describe Niebuhr's legacy and ask what wisdom he might bring to the political and religious dynamics of the early 21st century.

The program will look at Niebuhr's foundational idea, "Christian realism" — a pragmatic middle way between religious idealism and religious arrogance. It will examine how his theology influenced leading figures in law, culture and politics, and how he continues to influence contemporary thinkers on the right and the left, in America and abroad. It will probe the enduring questions Niebuhr brought to the crises of his day, through public activism and such books as The Nature and Destiny of Man, Moral Man and Immoral Society and The Irony of American History. Niebuhr was also the author of "The Serenity Prayer," which is now translated and recited in virtually every language in the world.

"Moral Man and Immoral Society: the Public Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr" includes interviews with:

  • Elizabeth Sifton, publisher, and daughter and biographer of Niebuhr;
  • Richard Wightman Fox, University of Southern California intellectual historian and Niebuhr biographer;
  • Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago political theorist;
  • Max Stackhouse, Harvard ethicist;

  • Robin Lovin, Southern Methodist University theologian and Niebuhr interpreter.

The program will also excerpt archived Being interviews with:

  • Chris Hedges, New York Times correspondent;
  • Charles Villa-Vicencio, South African theologian and Truth and Reconciliation Commission director of research;
  • Reverend Peter J. Gomes, professor and minister of Harvard Universityís Memorial Church;
  • Michael Cromartie, political commentator and vice president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

WEB REPORTS
The Being Web site (www.speakingoffaith.org) will be expanded to include many Web-exclusive features, including archival photographs; an extensive collection of Niebuhr's correspondence; expanded interviews with the experts and associates who knew him; and maps and timelines illustrating his life and thought.

ABOUT Being
Being, hosted by Krista Tippett, is public radio's weekly national conversation about belief, meaning, ethics and ideas. It is produced and distributed by American Public Media. Being does not always have "religion" itself as a subject. Week after week, it grapples with themes of American life — asking how perspectives of faith might distinctively inform and illuminate our public reflection.

TUNE IN
"Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Public Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr" will be broadcast during Being program times nationwide Feb. 10-16. To locate public radio stations broadcasting Being, visit the program's Web site, www.speakingoffaith.org.

"Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Public Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr" is made possible in part by a grant from the National Endowment for Humanities (NEH). Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in the program do not necessarily represent those of the NEH.

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Authors and radio documentarians Stephen Smith and Catherine Ellis to present Say It Plain: A Century of Great African American Speeches During Their Minnesota Book Tour

Contact: Christina Schmitt
(651) 290-1449
cschmitt@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

Authors and radio documentarians Stephen Smith and Catherine Ellis
to present Say It Plain: A Century of Great African American Speeches
During Their Minnesota Book Tour

Book-and-CD set and radio documentary share a compelling oratory history, including speeches from Booker T. Washington,
Martin Luther King and Jesse Jackson

Smith and Ellis will share audio clips and excerpts
from the project in honor of Black History Month

( St. Paul, Minn. ) January 26, 2005 ó While most of us have heard at least parts of Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream , many other great speeches have been obscured by time, trapped in dusty archives.

The book-and-CD set Say it Plain: A Century of Great African American Speeches (The New Press), and its companion radio documentary from American RadioWorks, share oratory history both obscure and well known, the result of a year-long search through the archival record. The project highlights landmark sermons, speeches and broadcasts recorded between 1906 and 2004.

Authors and radio documentarians Stephen Smith and Catherine Ellis will present select recordings at stops on a Minnesota book tour, a set of dates timed to highlight Black History Month.

More information about Say it Plain can be found at americanradioworks.org.

TOUR DATES

All presentations are free and open to the public:

  • Minneapolis: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 8 ó Birch Bark Books

  • Rochester: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 9 ó Barnes & Noble

  • St. Paul: 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 ó Bound to be Read

  • Duluth/Superior: 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 11 ó J.W. Beecroft Books, Superior, Wisc.

TUNE IN: "Say it Plain: A Century of Great African American Speeches" radio documentary will broadcast at noon Feb. 2, repeating at 9 p.m. that evening, on all Minnesota Public Radio news and information stations, including KNOW 91.1 FM in the Twin Cities.

ABOUT STEPHEN SMITH AND CATHERINE ELLIS
Catherine Ellis is a consulting producer for American RadioWorks. She holds a Ph.D in anthropology from Columbia University. Stephen Smith is the executive editor for American RadioWorks. He produces documentaries on a wide range of domestic and international issues, including American history.

ABOUT AMERICAN RADIOWORKS
American RadioWorks is the documentary unit of American Public Media, the national production and distribution arm of Minnesota Public Radio. Its many awards include the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Gold Baton Award óbroadcast journalism's highest award ó as well as awards from the Overseas Press Club, Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc., the Robert F. Kennedy Foundation, the American Women in Radio and Television, and others. Major funding for American RadioWorks is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. www.americanradioworks.org.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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Jim Russell to Head New Program Development for American Public Media

January 21, 2005

Jim Russell to Head New Program Development for American Public Media

(St. Paul, MN and Los Angeles, CA) — American Public Media and Minnesota Public Radio today announced that Jim Russell will become Senior Vice President and General Manager of New Program Development for American Public Media, the national program production and distribution arm of Minnesota Public Radio.

Jim is one of the most respected journalists and producers in public radio. In 1988, he invented Marketplace, which has grown to become the country's most popular business program on radio or television. In 2001, he created and is currently Executive Producer of American Public Media's new Weekend America broadcast service.

In this new role, Jim will oversee all new national program development by American Public Media, including the current development of Weekend America. With the assistance of his colleagues — Bill Buzenberg, Sarah Lutman and J.J. Yore — Jim will articulate and implement American Public Media's vision for new program development and assist in the design, development and staffing of all new national programs.

"We're pleased that Jim has accepted this important new strategic leadership position for American Public Media," said Jon McTaggart, Chief Operating Officer. "This new position emphasizes the importance of new program creation for our future. Jim's leadership will help us focus our new program investments and accelerate our activity."

Before creating Marketplace, Jim was the Station Director of two Twin Cities public television stations and came to Minnesota from National Public Radio in Washington, where he had worked since NPR went on the air in 1971 as one of the networkís first reporters, and later as a Producer and Executive Producer of All Things Considered. He also worked in commercial radio and as a foreign correspondent in Vietnam and Cambodia. He is the winner of the duPont Columbia, Peabody, Ohio State, Headliner and numerous other awards, and is profiled in Who's Who in America, Who's Who in Entertainment and Who's Who in the West.

Jim has expressed eagerness to begin his new role, saying it will allow him to spend most of his time doing what he loves — creating exciting new programming — and applying his unique perspective, extensive talents and management skills to the process.

Weekend America is funded in part by a major grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in collaboration with public radio content partners WBUR Boston, WCPN Cleveland, WMFE Orlando, KUOW Seattle, KPCC Los Angeles, KNOW St. Paul and the Association for Independents in Radio.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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American Radioworks and Marketplace Expose the Tension Between Technology and Privacy in Radio Special "No Place to Hide"

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

American Radioworks and Marketplace Expose the Tension Between Technology and Privacy in Radio Special "No Place to Hide"

Hour-long special to broadcast on public radio stations nationwide in January; shorter report to air during Marketplace on January 19.

WHAT: Almost every aspect of our lives is being recorded by someone, somewhere. Every time we buy milk and bread, a pair of jeans or CD, information is being collected and stored. Computers track when we surf the Net, absorb the details from consumer surveys, note when and where we use our cell phones. For years, billions of personal records have been used to improve direct marketing and customer management. Now, without your permission, those files are fast becoming a part of the war on terror and efforts to bolster homeland security.

No Place to Hide is a new investigative project from the Center for Investigative Reporting and Washington Post reporter Robert OíHarrow. OíHarrow, who has written this new book about how, since 9/11, private surveillance companies have joined forces with government agencies to create a new world of high-tech domestic spying, with few rules to guide and protect us, also collaborated with American RadioWorks producer John Biewen to create "No Place to Hide," the radio and Internet documentary.

In American RadioWorks' radio and Internet documentary, "No Place to Hide," O'Harrow and Biewen show key players in the information industry, counter-intelligence officials who have turned to the private sector for help and some of the "regular" people swept up in the ever-expanding digital net.

TUNE IN: American RadioWorks' "No Place to Hide" radio documentary will air on public radio stations nationwide in January. An abridged version of the documentary will air on January 19 on public radio stations nationwide during Marketplace. Check local radio listings for times and stations in your area or visit www.marketplace.org/about/stations.

ONLINE: Audio and transcripts of the radio project are available now at www.americanradioworks.org/features/noplacetohide/ including interviews with:

  • John AshcroftU.S. Attorney General, led the Bush administration's drive to push through the USA Patriot Act in the fall of 2001. That law undid a generation of restraints on the gathering and sharing of domestic intelligence.

  • John Poindexter, former director of the Pentagon's research and development arm, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). As national security adviser in the Reagan administration he was a leading figure in the Iran-Contra scandal. In 1990 he was convicted of multiple felonies, including conspiracy, obstruction of justice and lying to Congress. The convictions were ultimately reversed because of immunity agreements covering his Senate testimony. After September 11, 2001, DARPA hired Poindexter to head its Information Awareness Office and its Total Information Awareness program.

  • Patrick Leahy, ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee in the U.S. Senate. As the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Leahy led his party's negotiations over the USA Patriot Act in the six weeks following the 9-11 attacks.

  • Viet Dinh, primary author of the USA Patriot Act.

  • Chris Pyle, who helped reveal the Army's vast domestic spying program in 1970.

  • Michael Berry, an identity theft victim warned by police that he might be arrested at any time — for murder, the crime police said was committed by the man who allegedly took on Berryís persona.

WHO: "No Place to Hide" is part of a unique multimedia collaboration led by Robert O'Harrow, Jr. and supported by the Center for Investigative Reporting. In addition to the book, O'Harrow's reporting also led to an hour-long documentary for ABC News co-produced with Peter Jennings Productions to air January 20, 2005; a one-hour documentary for public radio, co-produced with American RadioWorks and distributed by American Public Media to air in January 2005; and article for The Washington Post Magazine. Links and more information about this project can be found at http://www.noplacetohide.net/.

Robert OíHarrow, Jr. is a reporter at The Washington Post and is an associate of the Center for Investigative Reporting. He was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for articles on privacy and technology and a recipient of the 2003 Carnegie Mellon Cyber Security Reporting Award.

Amercian RadioWorks correspondent-producer John Biewen has produced a large body of work on economic and social issues, as well as investigative reports and historical documentaries. Biewen is based oat the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in Durham, N. C.

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Is "Justice for Sale?"

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.org
www.americanpublicmedia.org

Is "Justice for Sale?"

American Radioworks and Marketplace Highlight
a Dramatic Shift in the Judiciary

The Two-Part Public Radio Series Will Air on January 17 During
Marketplace Morning Report and Marketplace

WHAT: Judges are supposed to make decisions based on a dispassionate reading of the law. Politics has no place in a courtroomóat least in theory. But judges are elected to the bench in 38 states, and these campaigns are increasingly expensive, viciousóand partisan. The cost of November's judicial elections will likely top the record $45 million spent in 2000 (although the final tally isn't in yet). The campaign money largely came from business interests and their trial lawyer and union opponents.

Long-time court-watchers are worried that the combination of special interest cash and bitter partisanship will corrupt the independence of the courts. ì2004 was the tipping point year and now no state that elects judges is safe from a rising tide of special interest pressure on their court elections,î says Burt Brandenberg, executive director of Justice at Stake, a nonpartisan group based in Washington D.C.

Deborah Goldberg of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University fears that the more a judicial seat looks like any other political prize the more it will give the average citizen the sense that "justice is for sale."

MARKETPLACE MORNING REPORT: Investigative reporter William Kistner documents that in many states across the country this year, judicial races are on track to be the most expensive in history. Much of the money came from special interest groups that funded negative television ads. The campaign money spigot is open.

MARKETPLACE PM: Kistner also followed one highly contested judicial race in West Virginia. That fight for a Supreme Court seat pitted a business-backed corporate lawyer, Brent Benjamin, against a labor-backed incumbent judge, Warren McGraw. About $5 million was spent on the race, an unheard of sum in the mostly rural mountain state. Much of the money came from Don Blankenship, a Benjamin-backer and chief executive officer of Massey Energy Company, which has extensive coal operations in West Virginia. The company happened to be fighting off a major lawsuit headed to the West Virginia Supreme Court. Benjamin won. And Blankenship defends his role in making the courts more business friendly.

Some states are trying to limit the influence of politics and money on the courts. For instance, North Carolina became the first state to elect a Supreme Court judge using a comprehensive public financing system for judicial elections.

William Kistner is a reporter and producer based in Washington and an associate of the Center for Investigative Reporting. He has contributed to PBS' FRONTLINE, the Discovery Channel, and CBS' 60 Minutes, and has written stories for national magazines and major newspapers. He has been a staff producer with ABC News Day One in Washington, a staff reporter with the Center for Investigative Reporting and he as served as a writer and news editor with Professional Pilot magazine in Washington.

TUNE IN: ìJustice for Saleî will air January 17 on public radio stations nationwide during Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report. Check local radio listings for the times and stations in your area or go to www.marketplace.org/about/stations.

ONLINE: Audio and transcripts of the radio project will be available Jan.17 at americanradioworks.org.

WHO: "Justice for Sale" is a joint production of Marketplace and American RadioWorks. Marketplace and its sister program, Marketplace Morning Report , are daily national business programs produced by American Public Media in Los Angeles. American RadioWorks is the documentary unit of American Public Media in St. Paul, Minn.

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Public Radio Series, "The Surprising Legacy of Y2K," to Document the History and Effects of the Computer Scare on Its Fifth Anniversary

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.us
www.americanpublicmedia.us

Public Radio Series, "The Surprising Legacy of Y2K," to Document the History and Effects of the Computer Scare on Its Fifth Anniversary

Joint American RadioWorks and Marketplace investigation examines the hype over Y2K and finds a direct connection to the growth of high-tech offshoring

The three-part series will air on Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report Jan. 3 and 4, 2005

WHAT: Five years after the hoopla and warnings about Y2K, many dismiss it as a hoax, scam or non-event.

Not only was Y2K — shorthand for the inability of computers to recognize "00" as a reference to the year 2000 — a real threat narrowly averted, the work done in the rush to fix the problem laid the groundwork for perhaps today's biggest economic story: white collar jobs being sent overseas — particularly to India.

Producers Chris Farrell, Catherine Winter and Ochen Kaylan examine this economic, technological and cultural event on its fifth anniversary.

"When we approached the Y2K story, I figured it would turn into a tale of hype and greed," said Farrell. "But the economic fallout of Y2K was far greater than I realized. We are still living and working with Y2K's impact five years later."

Included in the report:

  • Reflections from John Koskinen, the witty Y2K czar appointed by President Clinton. He discusses how his was the ultimate "bag man job": If he succeeded, people would think Y2K a hoax. If he failed, he would be blamed for the crisis.

  • The story of Ben Levi, who built a house in the Boulder foothills. The house can be disconnected from the power grid, and Levi was a little disappointed that nothing happened - he hoped Y2K would lead people to be less dependent on technology and more concerned with sustainability.

  • Interviews with Indian high-tech entrepreneurs and workers in Silicon Valley. The Indian population in the U.S. has surged over the past decade, and connections between the Silicon Valley and India tightened dramatically during Y2K.

TUNE IN: "The Surprising Legacy of Y2K" will broadcast during the afternoon business program Marketplace on Jan. 3 and 4 and during the Marketplace Morning Report on Jan. 3, 2005. To find local broadcasts, go to www.marketplace.org.

ONLINE: A companion Web site allows visitors to listen to or read the stories or share their own. They can also join the discussion on the controversial practice of offshoring skilled work. Online at www.americanradioworks/features/y2k. [Note The site will be available Jan. 2, 2005.]

WHO: "The Surprising Legacy of Y2K" is a joint production of American RadioWorks and Marketplace. ARW is the documentary unit of American Public Media in St. Paul, Minn. Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report are produced by American Public Media in Los Angeles and distributed by Public Radio International. Marketplace and Marketplace Morning Report air weekdays on more than 400 stations reaching almost 8 million weekly listeners.

ABOUT CHRIS FARRELL: Chris Farrell has more than 25 years of experience in economics and personal finance journalism. In addition to his central role on the Sound Money, American Public Media's personal finance program. Chris serves as the personal finance expert on Marketplace Morning Report. He's also contributing editor at Business Week magazine. He was host of public television's personal finance program Right on the Money and is the author of the show's companion book "Right on the Money: Taking Control of Your Personal Finances." He's also a journalist with American RadioWorks, American Public Media's award-winning documentary unit. Chris is a graduate of Stanford and The London School of Economics.

Editor/Producer Catherine Winter began working for Minnesota Public Radio in 1987 as legal affairs correspondent. She later produced features on rural issues for MPR's Mainstreet Radio team. She is the recipient of numerous national awards for her work, including two Silver Gavel awards from the American Bar Association and the Unity Award for reporting on issues affecting minorities and disabled persons. She taught writing and journalism at the University of Minnesota Duluth from 1999-2004. Winter holds a master's degree in English and linguistics from UMD and a master's degree in journalism from the University of California at Berkeley.

Web Producer Ochen Kaylan comes to American RadioWorks with extensive digital and graphic design experience, including serving as the Manager of Digital Design at the Walker Art Center and Senior Designer at Larsen Design. He has also taught at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Kaylan has received numerous design and advertising awards including: a Gold Pencil from The One Club; AIGA Minnesota Design Show selection; The Standard of Excellence Award from the Webawards; and a Merit from HOW Interactive. His digital and audio artwork has been shown at the San Francisco Art Institute, Alyce de Roulet Williamson Gallery, Austin Museum of Art, Walker Art Center, Transom.org, and Gallery 9.

INTERVIEWS: Contact Connie Molby to arrange an interview with Chris Farrell.

American Public Media(tm) is the nation's second-biggest producer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listeners nationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®, Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The Splendid Table®, Being™ and special reports produced by its national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. American Public Media is the national production and distribution division of Minnesota Public Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sister company Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger family of companies within American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organization whose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to support public media for public service. A complete list of stations, programs and additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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KATHRYN SCOTT NAMED SENIOR PRODUCER OF WEEKEND AMERICA

Contact: Connie Molby
(651) 290-1113
cmolby@americanpublicmedia.us
www.americanpublicmedia.us

KATHRYN SCOTT NAMED SENIOR PRODUCER OF
WEEKEND AMERICA

Veteran producer with a background in documentary films, cablenews and public broadcasting will relocate to Los Angeles inJanuary 2005

(Los Angeles) December 9, 2004– Kathryn Scott,a veteran producer with a diverse broadcasting, production andjournalism background, has beennamed senior producer for American Public Media’s newestnational program, Weekend America.

Weekend America is a two-hour public radio program service designedto fit the weekend state of mind. Barbara Bogaev and Bill Radke hostthe program each week from Los Angeles, inviting listeners to a livelyconversation about the issues of the week, the arts and public affairs.

“With Senior Producer Kathryn Scott and Managing Editor JeremySkeet as our editorial and production leaders of Weekend America, wehave a strong set of skills — strong ideas, strong editorialdirection and strong production,” said Executive Producer JimRussell. “It’s a winning combination.”

Currently a producer atMinnesota Public Radio in St. Paul, most recently with the programSound Money, Scott has been a freelance producer andwriter in Alexandria, Va.; Washington bureau chief for Tech TV News,a national cable television network devoted to technology news; andexecutive producer for documentary films and programs. Her broadcastexperience includes producing PBS’s science program Newton’sApple and as an investigative producer for local news. She also servedas the executive producer of The Newseum in Arlington, Va. — thefirst national journalism museum.

“I am excited about contributing to the continued success ofWeekend America. The energy at the Frank Stanton studios and the innovativeprogramming on Weekend America attracted me immediately,” saidKathryn Scott. “It will be great to be a part of it.”

Scott received a Parent’s Choice and National Endowment of theArts awards for her work on Newton’s Apple. She also receivedthree CINE Gold Eagle awards for her documentary films at The Newseum.She received her degree with honors in journalism and political sciencefrom the University of Wisconsin. She will relocate to Los Angelesin January.

Weekend America airs onSaturdays on more than 80 public radio stations across the nation.

WeekendAmerica is produced by American Public Media in associationwith WBUR, Boston: WCPN, Cleveland; KPCC, Los Angeles; WMFE, Orlando;KUOW, Seattle; KNOW, St. Paul, and AIR, the Association of Independentsin Radio. American Public Media™ is the nation's second-biggestproducer of public radio programs, reaching 13.5 million listenersnationwide each week. National programs include A Prairie Home Companion®,Saint Paul Sunday®, Marketplace®, Sound Money®, The SplendidTable®, Being™ and special reports produced byits national documentary unit, American RadioWorks®. AmericanPublic Media is the national production and distribution divisionof MinnesotaPublic Radio®. Minnesota Public Radio, along with its sistercompany Southern California Public Radio, belongs to a larger familyof companieswithin American Public Media Group, a national nonprofit organizationwhose purpose is to develop resources, services and systems to supportpublic media for public service. A complete list of stations, programsand additional services can be obtained at www.americanpublicmedia.us.

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Source: Dataare copyright Arbitron, Inc. Arbitron data are estimates only.
Spring 2004

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