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Rooting For Radical Radio

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  • Rooting For Radical Radio

    Rooting for radical radio
    Stefan Christoff

    Hour.Ca
    http://www.hour.ca/news/news.as px?iIDArticle=17473
    June 4 2009
    Canada

    David Barsamian, founder of Alternative Radio

    Amidst the current global crisis facing major media organizations,
    with newspaper and magazine offices closing within the larger global
    financial storm, alternative media projects on the radio and online
    are alive and flourishing, with increasing numbers of people turning
    to such outlets for their news on the world.

    The National Campus and Community Radio Conference (NCRC), taking
    place here June 7-13, focuses on the current state of independent
    media, especially community/campus radio, and brings community radio
    delegates from across the country into an open discussion.

    Dating back to the 1980s, Alternative Radio, founded by
    Armenian-American journalist and author David Barsamian, has been
    a shining example of an independent media initiative that wields
    international scope while maintaining fierce independence and strong
    ties to social movements. Barsamian is the keynote speaker at the
    NCRC, offering a historical perspective on the current state of
    independent media.

    "Radio is uniquely positioned to deliver intellectual content,
    particularly because a listener is not distracted by the image,
    as in TV or the Internet," says Barsamian. "I think that for ideas
    and serious talk, radio is the singular medium that can offer a real
    ability for listeners to really delve into the profound issues of
    our time."

    The NCRC is the largest gathering of community and campus radio
    workers in the country. In recent years, it has seen the development
    of Groundwire, the first national grassroots news program broadcasting
    on community radio across Canada.

    "Viewers of television and readers of print media have been
    disappearing in droves in recent years, and their advertising dollars
    with them," outlines Barsamian. "People are turning to alternative
    media in increasing numbers - particularly among young people there is
    a real disgust towards corporate media, and many of the most popular
    new media projects are created by young people who are inventing new
    media languages."
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