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‘There is a Narrative that’s Missing’ Laura Flanders Tells Grassroots Radio Gathering
Television and radio host Laura Flanders ripped into what she called "the all-about the-money media" and encouraged 150 radio enthusiasts to work harder at storytelling in a keynote address to the Grassroots Radio Conference May 14.
Hosted by the Southern Humboldt County community radio station KMUD, the fifteenth annual Grassroots Radio Conference brought together hundreds of broadcast enthusiasts for a weekend of workshops and skill-shares. Topics included community journalism, legal compliance, technical wizardry, and social justice. (Photo: Raw Story) Calling the Obama administration "a veneer of new backed up by the same old same old," Flanders took shots across the political spectrum garnering bursts of applause with her characteristic mix of humor and breaking news.
She stressed that there is a failure in the media to report on important news from the perspective of the public, and insisted that those stories can be told better at the grassroots level. "There is a narrative that's missing," Flanders insisted. "Rupert Murdoch bought the narrative when he paid $5 billion for Wall Street Journal... And we are being played and played and played and played."
Her most recent book Blue Grit looked at an upsurge in grassroots activism during the previous presidential administration. She said Friday night that there was more progressive politics than anything reflected in the Democratic party. On keeping President Obama accountable to those who elected him she said, "We're not doing any better job than the civilians of Afghanistan."
She broke the news of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger proposing the elimination of $12 billion in California welfare spending, which she said would affect 1.4 million people. She talked about the controversial new climate bill, the 27 drilling licenses approved since the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and said sometimes Congressional hearings can make good viewing on CSPAN.
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However, Flanders exclaimed, "It's not Congressional hearings we need into Massey or BP or Goldman Sachs. We need court hearings. We need some of these people taken away in chains."
Clearly, Flanders enjoyed the crowd's reactions to her key points, and she made some statements that are more politically radical than her image, including encouraging one pirate radio advocate that California's budget crisis could limit enforcement. However, her most outrageous statement came up near the end of the speec.
"Why don't you do what Oklahoma wants to do with people who want abortions?" she asked rhetorically. "You can be strapped to a gurney and required to listen to the heartbeat of your fetus, as if this had never occurred to you before, that there was a heartbeat there. What if we strapped some derivatives traders into those stirrups, made them put on that gown, and listen to the high-pitched squeals of people who can't pay their mortgages? What if we strapped the folks who are responsible at British Petroleum and Halliburton and the Interior Secretary and forced them to listen to the pleas of people who have lost their entire livelihoods on the Gulf Coast?"
The crowd of volunteers and staff for commercial-free, independent radio stations around the continent cheered her on, enjoying the mood in the rundown old movie theater in downtown Garberville, CA.
Passion is not proprietary
Hosted by the Southern Humboldt County community radio station KMUD, the fifteenth annual Grassroots Radio Conference brought together hundreds of broadcast enthusiasts for a weekend of workshops and skill-shares. Topics included community journalism, legal compliance, technical wizardry, and social justice.
Maka Munoz of Palabra Radio and Ana Martina of El Otro Lado began their workshop on building a network for immigrant-rights radio content by asking attendees to share stories from home. The group of two dozen heard about inaccurate media portrayals, a controversial gang injunction, widespread profiling, and the separation of families by detention and deportation. Representatives from 15 immigrant radio projects will converge at the upcoming Allied Media Conference (June 17-20 in Detroit).
Pete Tridish and Maggie Avener of Prometheus Radio offered insight into how the airwaves are being reshaped in response to new technologies, and worked with the attendees to strategize about ensuring the grassroots has a place on tomorrow's spectrum. Rip Robbins of KSVR Mt Vernon, WA and Elizabeth Robinson KCSB Santa Barbara, CA supplied information on limits to on-air expression. Low-budget stations have to be careful to avoid sanctions from the FCC, the IRS or the law.
Compliance with radio royalty structures supporting musicians were explained by Clay Leander of KPFA Berkeley and attorney Michael Couzens. SoundExchange collects royalties for labels and artists from webcasters. Congress has been lobbied hard about the Performance Rights Act, which seeks to force broadcasters to pay royalties to performers, not just songwriters and copyright holders.
David Pakman explained his production process, syndication, outreach, marketing and value added content. He is host and producer of Midweek Politics, a political talk show with 40 TV affiliates and 40 radio affiliates. He Dan Roberts has produced The Shortwave Report off-the-grid since 1997. He demonstrated the basic equipment he uses to share international perspectives gleaned from shortwave transmissions. His program airs on dozens of community radio affiliates in North America. Both programs are made available free online.
Govinda Dalton and Christina Aanestad of Mendocino County-based Earthcycles.net showed off their veggie oil-powered remote broadcasting studio. The converted school bus is home to studio equipment, LPFM antenna, satellite dish for web streaming uplink, wind turbine, solar panels, even a wood stove inside the bus. KMUD also tours inside their emergency-response broadcast trailer, which was parked outside conference headquarters all weekend.
Claude Marks of the Freedom Archives demonstrated projects that re-purpose historical archives of community radio and social justice movements. "Healthy programming has to have roots," he said. Community radio reporters were embedded in the movements of the fifties, sixties and seventies, not with the military. "It's a subjugated history," Marks says. "The movements were attacked. So last year we anticipated the repression of Black Panthers by producing our documentary Legacy of Torture and that meant that the press couldn't just run with the cops' story."
Cointelpro 101, the new film by the Freedom Archives, will debut at the US Social Forum (June 22-26 in Detroit). Marks is wary of society's short-term memory, seeking to protect the stories of uprisings and dissidence from misinformed representations. And he also hopes to inspire new generations of community journalists to learn of traditions of resistance and have the courage to risk getting into the line of fire to tell important stories. He says, "The history isn't all made in the studio or over the phone."

9 Comments so far
Show AllI've actually considered getting a short wave radio. It's the same thing as a Ham radio right? I was told by the red cross that came to our job for emergency training that they run about 200 bucks. Correct( anyone).
This type of communication may be all there is in a few years. I have been reading the articles that I pulled off the Peak oil web site and here are some of the titles.
The Imminent Collaspe of Industrial Society
Counter Currents .org May 6 2010
Peter Good Child
The Century of Famine
By Peter Goodchild May 10th 2010
Counter Currents
It's Worse Than You Think: Plotting Global
Hydrocarbon Collaspe
By Matthew Wild May 11 2010
Peak Oil and the Catastrophe in the Gulf Of Mexico
By Kjell Aleklett-- ASPO International
"Watershed Month for The Truth About Peak Oil "
Matthew Wild -- Peak Generation
Why Would Big Oil Ignore Its Own Demise?
By John James --Counter Currents
A short wave radio needs a good antenna away from the powerlines. I bought one from Amazon.
I unpluged my TV when Bush was still in power so it's radio and internet for me these days.
We have a lie based government and a fraud based economy. Where to start?
I remember a young MLK Boycotting busses...
Recently, I read an article stating that 800,000 people had disconnected from their TV cable services within the past year. The 800,000 number represents the number whose names were actually on the bills -- more people, of course, lived in the homes that disconnected.
My TV is hooked up to a DVD player, although my son still pays for cable.
"Why don't you do what Oklahoma wants to do with people who want abortions?" she asked rhetorically. "You can be strapped to a gurney and required to listen to the heartbeat of your fetus, as if this had never occurred to you before, that there was a heartbeat there. What if we strapped some derivatives traders into those stirrups, made them put on that gown, and listen to the high-pitched squeals of people who can't pay their mortgages? What if we strapped the folks who are responsible at British Petroleum and Halliburton and the Interior Secretary and forced them to listen to the pleas of people who have lost their entire livelihoods on the Gulf Coast?"
Brilliant, tell it sister Laura. Don't know about the more radical than her image line, I always thought she was one of the most radical voices out there.
Lets make them listen to the sounds of dying birds and sea life too.
I think many more of us are just getting up to here with all the forces around us killing us (women and children first), up to here enough to start to tell the truth. Good on Laura for speaking it so well. We are being sold a bill of goods by a bunch of guys who tell us they are so special in their knowledge that we can't possibly contribute democratically to decision making. Truth is they don't know what the hell they are doing on Wall St., in Afghanistan, on the planet or in Washington. Idiots without soul are running things with an eye on only the next quarterly profit statement or their boyhood star war fantasies.
A woman native to Rongelap, a Pacific Island, summed it up watching the devastating results of atomic testing in her home territory " The Americans are very clever at doing stupid things."
Well said
So what have you done lately to bring that 'missing narrative' to the front?
All I see, read and hear everywhere are 'experts', 'authors', 'politicians', 'bloggers' and 'academics'. Media outlets, regardless of form or format, have agendas as do the 'experts', 'authors', 'politicians', 'bloggers' and 'academics'. It's all one big info-mercial. Instead of paying for advertisement, like the gizmo-gadget floggers, they are paid to 'flog their wares' to the gullible masses.
Both Studs Terkel and Howard Zinn tried mightily, with such humanity and compassion, to bring insight to the power and importance of ordinary people and the 'missing narrative' of their history.
All the 'technology' and the 'social networking' = soundbites, commoditized thoughts. The 'acts' of communication have replaced real communication. It's become knee-jerk response, reactive. The thought, opinion and discussion, conversation necessary to the narrative are disappearing.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Folks, people like the ones described in this article are probably the last chance to preserve any fragment of democracy in this country and the last chance to preserve any kind of free press that hasn't been turned into a psychological mirror of our depraved plutocracy.
"Why don't you do what Oklahoma wants to do with people who want abortions?" she asked rhetorically. "You can be strapped to a gurney and required to listen to the heartbeat of your fetus, as if this had never occurred to you before, that there was a heartbeat there.
This is a perfect example of what happens when religious people get involved in politics. These same folks will be happy to spend hours explaining to you why Islamic fundamentalism is evil, while not noticing the stench of Christian fundamentalism all over them. There is really no difference between the branches of the Abrahamic religions. They all grow from the same poisonous root.