Program changes for July 2009

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Program changes for July 2009
We've been updating our on-air sound to offer compelling radio programs in a convenient and easy-to-follow schedule. We've moved a step at a time, starting with surveys and community meetings and then working closely with our volunteer-driven program committee to offer more great radio. We want to give you a better listening experience, and we want to reach more listeners while keeping a commitment to our core values which include community, diversity and a perspective of progressive change in the world. With all that in mind, here's a primer on what we've changed and why, this year and last year:
 
Last Year - Evening Music

·         Edgier, more contemporary and/or has a younger audience: Electronica, hip-hop, indie, punk, experimental, dj sets and African-American culture, music and politics. 

·         Clarity: How do we make our schedule easier to understand and follow? A goal for each round of changes is to create a schedule that listeners can understand and also put programming in blocks or strips that is likely to attract the same audience.

·         Cancellations: Cancelled more traditional music programming such as Irish music. Cancelled Soul Strip which was often older and more mainstream music and replaced with 7-8pm Hard Knock Radio with Davey D. Consolidated reggae programming to one evening to have hip-hop, electronica, etc. on Friday evening. Moved women’s programming and eclectic shows from Sunday night to replace with world, electronica and hip hop mixes. 

 

Summer 08 to Spring 2009 – Morning Public Affairs Scheduling

·         How do we get listeners to tune in first thing in the morning? Democracy Now is the one program that can realistically compete with NPR’s Morning Edition, so it’s on at 7am. 

·         How do we keep the Amy Goodman audience listening? Stick with “hard news” and Public Affairs early on and move the arts, culture, health and community programming to the last hour. 

·         Evening Drive time: In March, we began repeating Democracy Now! At 4 pm, to lead into the Evening News and Public Affairs strip.

·         Syndicated programs: Use syndicated programs to offer a predictable schedule with solid content leading into local programming. Amy Goodman now leads into morning talk and evening news. Flashpoints offers an anchor after Cascadia and before our cultural programming. Davey D. transitions from evening public affairs to evening music.

·         Cancellations: Cancelled morning news. Shortened morning talk radio and evening labor show for more focused content.

·         Schedule: 7am Democracy Now, 8am Talk Radio, 9am Public Affairs, 10am Air Cascadia (15 minutes of local news and commentary), 10:15 Flashpoints (and on Mondays If You Love This Planet), 11am Arts, culture, health and community. This created a more listenable ‘strip’ where listeners know to expect political shows from 10 – 11, and arts/culture from 11 – 12.

 June and July 2009 – Morning and Evening Public Affairs Programs

·         Talk Radio changes: While we have some excellent Talk shows listeners are asking for new voices. So, two mornings a week will be opened up for new hosts to audition. The Friday slot is now open for applications. Wednesday Talk Radio host Barbara Bernstein will move Locus Focus to Monday at 10:15 am to replace If You Love This Planet with local environmental programming. This will open up Wednesday talk radio in August for try-outs. Kathleen has also been working extensively with existing hosts to improve quality and promotions. A new volunteer position, ‘call screener’, will be created to help the board operator deal with incoming phone calls, and help avoid repeat callers.

 

·         Improve quality: Cancel selected shows and place new programs on air. The following shows will be cancelled effective July 6th: Boneheads & Bigots, Hole in the Bucket, Proverbial Perspectives and Indian World. All of these shows began with one format or host and have changed into another. Taking them off the air will make room for several new shows:

  1. Digital Divide: (Marc De Giere and collective) This program attempts to answer questions about how the latest technologies affect our communities through interviews, recordings, and commentary. The show touches upon such issues as open source, privacy, transparency, intellectual property, free speech, accessibility, hacking, net neutrality, file sharing, piracy, social networking, pollution, bioethics and more.
  2. Community Grooves: (Natalie Butto) A locally-focused program featuring diverse cultural organizations, events and guests.
  3. It Takes A Village: (Shaheed Hamid) Veteran KBOO host Shaheed Hamid brings in local organizations and individuals who are carrying out the vision of empowering the disenfranchised.
  4. Behind the Screen: (SW Conser) Program on film in Portland, looking behind the screen to expose the process of producing independent films.
  5. Fight the Empire: (Per Fagering) We live in an empire that began 500 years ago with the European conquest of the Americas. This program looks at how the empire permeates our lives.
  6. A Deeper Look (Linda Olson-Osterlund) Half hour interview show focusing on challenging social and political issues of our World today. Guests will include authors and activists writing and organizing around these issues. Tune in to get behind the headlines.  

·         Continue to refine scheduling: ‘Mitakuye Oyasin’ will be moved to Thursday evenings 6pm-7pm because it is a Public Affairs & music “hybrid” show that should work well leading into Davey D. This will open time for music programming in afternoon. Also, ‘Movie Talk’ will be changed to once a month, alternating with the Director’s Chair, a new show on films and filmmaking. ‘Voices of the Middle East’ will move to the mornings, where it will alternate with programs of similar content: ‘Veterans Voice’, ‘One Land Many Voices’ and ‘APA Compass’.

·         Continue Campaign for Programming Excellence: This summer Program staff will be scheduling program evaluations and trainings to follow up on the Marilyn Pittman trainings which all hosts attended in March.

December 2009 – Afternoon Music and Spanish Language

·         Focus on more “traditional” music in the afternoon(as contrasted with evening programming) , in understandable blocks

·         Schedule Spanish-language programming so that both Spanish and English speakers can understand when programming will be on the air. Currently, Spanish-language programming is on three different days at three different times. Sunday has a large block of programming but weekdays are shorter and of different lengths.

Comments

‘Mitakuye Oyasin’ should alternate with Indian Also, you didn't mention that you cancelled it on this page.

Thank you

Hi: It's great to see all the programming changes. Inspiring! I wonder what is the status of our application for Making Contact? We submitted it a few months ago and perhaps we missed a communication?

The weekly episodes just keep gettting better and better. For the first edition of each month we are doing a special series on responses to the economic meltdown: "How We Survive."

In fact the Making Contact/How We Survive releasing August 5 has a segment by a KBOO reporter--yay! So let us know what you thiknk and thx for all you do, Lisa

p.s. Green Jobs, Race and Economic "Recovery"
http://www.radioproject.org/archive/2009/1709.html

I'm very glad that Indian programming has been re-added after the cancellation of Indian World. Eugene Johnson is a powerful and relevant voice.