General Sessions:
   Once Upon A Time ... The End
   Pushing the Boundaries of Everyday Radio
   Featuring ... The Feature
   Trespassing
   Rocks, Riptides and Buoys: Radio in the Play of Airwaves
   These Are A Few of My Favorite Things
Breakout Sessions:
   Music
   Interview
   Voice
   Airtime
   Audio Doctor Sessions

 

Once Upon A Time ... The End
Moderated by Robert Krulwich, with Alan Berliner, Gwen Macsai and Joe Richman.

So, you've got your assignment. You've done your research, you've collected your tape and now it's time ... ("Oh god...") to write. In this session we examined the Everest and K-2 of story telling: How to Begin and (assuming you can get past that one), How to End. Do you invent a tentative start and finish before you begin? What if you have one, but not the other? Which is more important? (1:23:00)


 
Pushing the Boundaries of Everyday Radio
with Priya Ramu and Steve Wadhams

Diamonds are made under pressure! For this session, Priya Ramu and Steve Wadhams from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation presented their advice on how to make daily radio that shines and delights. Using examples from a wide range of daily information programming, they offered ideas and approaches to make interviews, news spots, and long-form reports more lively and memorable, no matter how tight the deadline. (1:26:41)

 
Featuring ... The Feature
Presented by Kaye Mortley

The radio "feature" is a long-standing tradition of the European airwaves, and is a format with a style all its own — quite different from the feature format broadcast across America. Kaye Mortley, an independent producer based in France, gave an introduction to a variety of feature work being produced in Europe today, including her own.

Mortley described the feature this way: "These pieces are mind movies - road movies sculpted out of reality. The information they convey is lateral, quirky, personal, not giving answers but inviting the listener to interact with the different worlds into which they beckon ... they are pieces where form is born of content and content shapes form." (1:26:59)

 
Trespassing
Moderated by Jay Allison, with Elizabeth Barret, LeAlan Jones and Joel Meyerowitz

Jay Allison led a discussion about the ways in which documentarians must be skilled in the art of trespassing — into the lives of others, between mediums and across boundaries that exist within their own roles as journalists, historians, interpreters and storytellers. (1:24:09)

 
Rocks, Riptides and Buoys: Radio in the Play of the Airwaves
Presented by Gregory Whitehead

Longtime proponent of radio as a fluid and flexible medium, Gregory Whitehead played a variety of work from around the world, opening into both a philosophical and pragmatic discussion about the role of imaginative radio in an increasingly congested media landscape. (1:19:09)

 
These Are a Few of My Favorite Things
Presented by Ira Glass

Ira Glass played and talked about radio and print journalism that has inspired him, including some surprising 1970's-era NPR documentaries which may be long forgotten by most, and some recent work by younger radio producers. (1:24:11)

 
Music
Presented by Sherre DeLys

Music and sound bring layers of meaning to your work. Incorporating them most effectively starts with looking for the movement and metaphor in your materials. Using examples from her own features, Sherre DeLys presented different approaches to integrated sound design. (1:13:09)

 
Interview
Presented by Hal Cannon and Taki Telonidis

With a little savvy and practice, magic can happen between two people and a microphone. Taki Telonidis and Hal Cannon outlined the basic elements of conducting an interview, both in technical and human terms, by playing great examples and bringing in the wisdom of master interviewers on public radio. (1:24:40)

 
Voice
Presented by Karen Michel

The three legs of the tripod of radio — voice, text, and sound — are interdependent, and all contribute to the "voice" of any radio piece. Independent producer Karen Michel discussed what makes a unique voice and presented work that demonstrates different styles of voice. (1:21:06)

 
Airtime
Moderated by Julia McEvoy, with Margaret Low Smith, Heidi Schultz and Jake Shapiro.

What does it take to get your work on the national airwaves? Representatives from NPR, PRI and the Public Radio Exchange explained how to get work on national programs and how to distribute stand-alone specials and series. They addressed such important issues as pay, producer credits, rights and editorial control. (1:06:51)
  Audio Doctor Sessions
With Drs. Benjamin Adair, Alex Blumberg, Katie Davis, Mandalit del Barco and Ira Glass

This year many conference attendees had the opportunity to bring their work (completed or in progress) to a private editing session with an accomplished producer. Appointments were determined by lottery, selected from those who indicated interest when they registered for the conference.
© The WBEZ Alliance, Inc. All rights reserved.
Contact | Search the site | Terms & Conditions | Site Map