Geoffrey Baer has worked in broadcast television for twenty years, and has spent the past twelve years at WTTW, Chicago's PBS station. He is host and writer of an ongoing series of WTTW documentaries on Chicago history and architecture. He is also Executive Producer of WTTW’s ongoing program Artbeat Chicago and of Chicago Stories, documentaries about people and events in Chicago (First round)
Nora Moreno Cargie has worked as a marketing and communications executive for more than a decade and is currently the Director of Marketing and Development for the Day Care Action Council of Illinois. Cargie spent the early part her career working for public radio, first at Chicago Public Radio and then on National Public Radio's Weekend All Things Considered. (First round)
Karen Cirillo serves as the Associate Director - Film / Programming of the DoubleTake Documentary Film Festival. After graduating from Duke University in 1997, she taught Oral History in the Community Stories program at the Center for Documentary Studies. (First and final round)
Cheryl Corley is a reporter at NPR's Midwest Bureau based in Chicago. She is also a substitute host of NPR's Morning Edition and Weekend All Things Considered. Prior to joining NPR in 1995, Corley was the news director at Chicago's Public Radio Station, WBEZ-FM. She has worked as a reporter for WTTW’s Chicago Tonight, and is a frequent panelist on public television news shows. (First round)
Carlos Cumpian is the editor-in-chief of MARCH Abrazo Press, the oldest Midwestern small press publishing poetry by Chicanos, Native Americans and Latina/os. Cumpian's third book, Armadillo Charm, was published by Tia Chucha Press. When not working as a high school teacher, Cumpian occasionally teaches poetry workshops at Columbia College in Chicago. (First round)
Andrea De Fotis is an independent radio producer based in Chicago. Most recently, De Fotis was Audio Editor for CITY 2000, a one-year photography, video and audio documentary project designed to capture and preserve a record of life in Chicago in the year 2000. Previously she worked at Chicago Public Radio where she produced the award winning news magazine Eight Forty Eight. (First round)
Wendy Dorr began working in radio in 1997 as a volunteer for KCRW in Santa Monica. After moving to New York in 1998, Wendy met Joe Richman (producer of Teenage Diaries and Prison Diaries series on All Things Considered and has been working with him ever since. Wendy is also a contributor to This American Life and is spending the summer of 2001 as their interim producer. (First round)
Susannah Felts lives in Chicago and teaches documentary studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She received her MFA from SAIC in 2000, and has published creative writing in The Sun, Verbatim, and Little Engines, and nonfiction work in several magazines and alternative newsweeklies. (First round)
Deborah George is the Senior Producer of American RadioWorks, the documentary project of Minnesota Public Radio and NPR News. She has worked as a reporter and field producer in the U.S., Asia, and Latin America. She's also the editor of Joe Richman’s Radio Diaries series on All Things Considered. Her work has earned numerous awards including the Ohio State Award and the Edward R. Murrow (RTNDA). (First and final round)
Jeremy Hobson started his public radio career at age nine hosting a children’s show for member station WILL in Urbana, IL. Hobson has spent the last two summers working as a host, reporter, and producer for Atlantic Public Media and spends the rest of the year working for WILL in Urbana, where he is starting his sophomore year at the University of Illinois. (First round)
Ira Glass is the host and producer of WBEZ's Peabody Award-winning program, This American Life. Glass began his career in public radio as an intern at National Public Radio headquarters in Washington when he was 19 years old. Since then, he has worked on nearly every NPR news program and done virtually every production there. Glass has won many awards, including Time Magazine’s "Best Radio Host in America” earlier this year. (First and final round)
Shirley Jahad is a veteran news correspondent and documentary producer at WBEZ who has covered politics, social issues, arts, and culture for the station since 1991. She also works as a correspondent for Chicago Public Television's Chicago Tonight program. In 1998 she received the prestigious Robert F. Kennedy award for best radio production nationwide from the Associated Press for her documentary Picture Me Rolling. (First round)
Eric Leonardson is an electro-acoustic composer, radio artist, sound designer and instrument inventor. In the 1980s he co-founded the Experimental Sound Studio in Chicago. Over the past decade he has produced concerts and performed throughout North America, Japan, and Germany. Leonardson also teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Columbia College. (First round)
Peter Margasak is a staff writer at The Chicago Reader, where he has authored the music column Post No Bills since 1996. His freelance work has appeared in many publications including Down Beat, The New York Times and JazzTimes. (First round)
Vincent Van Merwijk is an independent radio producer based in the Netherlands. He produces social documentaries for the educational broadcasting company—RVU, Radio Netherlands. He also produces work about international issues in Africa, the Soviet Union, Asia and Europe. Van Merwijk is the winner of the Zilveren Reissmicrofoon, the most prestigious radio award in the Netherlands and is co-author of De Radiodocumentaire, a handbook for documentary makers. (First and final round)
Milos Stehlik is co-founder and director of Facets Multimedia, a leading national media arts center. Since 1975, he's managed Facets' public programs which include screenings of foreign and independent films and video, the Chicago International Children's Film Festival and Facets Video, a pioneering catalog of over 50,000 foreign, independent, classic American, silent, fine arts and quality children’s videos. (First and final round)
Paul Tough is a features editor at The New York Times Magazine and the editor of Open Letters (openletters.net), a currently dormant online magazine of first-person writing. He has been a contributing editor of This American Life since its inception, and a contributing editor of Transom.org. His print reporting has appeared in Esquire, and The New Yorker. (First and final round)
Nancy Updike is a writer and independent radio producer in Los Angeles. She's contributed stories to All Things Considered, This American Life, Salon.com and others. Updike was a producer at This American Life for its first four years and is now a contributing editor. Before that, she was a tape cutter for Fresh Air and a reporter for WFCR in Amherst, MA. (First and final round)
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