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Archive for May, 2008


The Final Rose


Thursday, May 22, 2008

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by sskennelAt last he speaks.

Months went by after John Edwards dropped his bid for president and he said nothing. Clinton wooed, Obama wooed. And still this polymer-smiled populist kept quiet.

For all the anticipation, when Edwards finally endorsed Obama last week in Michigan he omitted the key phrase: “I endorse…”

In fact, Edwards’ endorsement was not so much an endorsement at all but rather a rose ceremony where Edwards spends half the speech praising Senator Clinton despite boos and moans from the audience. Only later does Edwards state matter-of-factly that Obama will be the next president.

In the end, the Obama campaign never issued a press release using the words endorse nor have all of Edwards’ super delegates moved towards Obama.

McCain, Boeing, Free Trade


Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Not sure exactly what’s happening in Seattle with McCain’s visit.  Couple wires and a PI report have a Boeing demonstration happening when he lands at 10:30 PST.  McCain was of course instrumental in killing the DoD-Boeing air tanker deal.

PRX has tape from McCain 2 months ago trying to assuage Boeing employees while at the same time guarding his Republican credentials as a free-trader.  Your bite is about 30 seconds in.

Here’s a backgrounder on the mess

The Biggest Elephant Not In The Room


Monday, May 12, 2008

Image by [jon]The loneliest Republican has to be Ron Paul. He has at least a million adoring fans, out fund-raised both McCain and Romney and holds Ronald Regan up like a chalice.

Yet he still can’t get any love from the Republican party.

But in the last week of April during the state caucus in Nevada, Ron Paul supporters came out in droves and overwhelmed what was to be a rubber stamp of John McCain’s delegates. Thanks to Brian Bahouth of Nevada Public Radio we have the audio. First you’ll hear the commotion caused by Ron Paul fans. One of whom, Rob Tyree, then takes over the proceedings. Then Congressman Paul speaks to the crowd.

All this is followed by Bahouth’s interview with Paul about the status of the Republican party.

Here’s the flash:

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If you want more raw audio from the campaign trail check out the full collection.

Victory Speeches From NC & IN


Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Victory speeches are up courtesy of NPR.  Free and annotated just like you like them.  Clinton here.  Obama here.

Getting Global With WNPR’s John Dankosky


Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Every couple of weeks John Dankosky pre-produces his daily talk show and goes in late to work. Last Friday on a gorgeous spring day he did just that. While zipping through the meandering hills of northwest Connecticut on his way to work, WNPR‘s news director and talk show host phoned PRX to talk about the show that aired that morning. He had on the Syrian ambassador, Imad Moustapha.

“He was in Connecticut connecting with local listeners and I didn’t feel any compulsion to do anything other than talk about international issues,” Dankosky said.

His show, “Where We Live,” is a local call in talk show that stretches the word local. While he makes sure that every show has some connection to Connecticut (Ambassador Moustapha was there on a lecture tour) Dankosky dismisses the idea that “local” listeners care only about “local issues.”

“In actuality if you go up to them on the street they’ll say they care about the Iraq war, the economy, they care about this presidential election. Pretty far down the list is this school budget in West Hartford.”

He pauses.

“People really care about these connections on national and international issues.”

Two years ago WNPR switched from Classical/News to News/Talk. Creating his show was an important part of the switch. Dankosky started with a fragmented crew who pull shifts elsewhere in the station. It wasn’t until recently that his senior producer, Catie Talarski, came on full time. “Where We Live” also steals a technical director and part time producer from other duties.

But a huge asset, Dankosky says, is his newsroom, a half dozen of “the best reporters in public radio” who feed show ideas and appear on the show to provide informed insight on current affairs.

In fact, most of the show’s topics center around stories generated from the newsroom. But then there are the shows on fair trade or the shows he does after each major presidential contest where he snatches pundits from local universities and recently grabbed sound from the PRX election archive.

“It’s trying to have a conversation each day that has some impact locally but also broadening out the larger issues. It’s a combination of local officials talking about very Connecticut-centric things and national authors and other folks trying to put things in larger context.”

Dankosky says part of WNPR’s motive for creating this blend of local, national, and international is to prepare for the day when–according to Dankosky–networks market directly to Connecticut listeners through the web and satellite.

“We have to make things that are all our own. Something that has this local and global connection that people here are really going to like because if we don’t have that then we’re irrelevant. We have to do that.”

But this fear that networks would eventually bypass member stations hasn’t forced Dankosky to join the din of other talk shows clamoring over the typical national fodder. He has so far avoided talking about Jeremiah Wright, for example. Instead, this election year has focused on local news makers talking about national issues. For instance, they have invited all of Connecticut’s federal candidates to their studio to take questions from callers on a range of national and international topics.

Here, Dankosky is happy, weaving a new dimension to local news that always looks global.

Readers and fans can listen to the full interview with John Dankosky in the flash player below. You can hear his show here.

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Picking Clinton Over Obama’s Race & Name


Friday, May 2, 2008

A really interesting story came out of West Virginia this morning, one that will play well in a lot of states watching primaries in North Carolina and Indiana.

Reporter Anna Sale visits a barber shop in Man, WV and asks who people will vote for and why. The answers she gets are blunt and (sometimes) worrisome, but Sale holds the yoke firm to give an unvarnished portrait of current political thought in Appalachia.

Any station covering the election at all next week will want to air this piece. Production is top notch and works easily into ME & ATC cutaways. It’s available on PRX here.  We also have other pieces and on race and politics.  Check ‘em out here.

West Virginians go to the poles on the 13th.