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Meet
the interns of the Whole Communities Radio Project! |
Eduardo DeLanderos-Tierra interviews Sylvia Evans about environmental toxins at the Plaza in North Portland.
Kate Welch shows Marlene Howell the way around a minidisc recorder.
Honna Veerkamp
Miriam Widman takes a break from editing her Walmart piece.
Patrik Angstrom Poore after five days of non-stop audio editing |
| HONNA VEERKAMP has been
producing Public Affairs programming for KBOO for 2 years. She grew up in
Lawrence, KS and first became interested in radio when she visited the college
radio station, KJHK, for career day in the 6th grade. Her life led her many
different places before coming back to radio in 1997 and when she produced
a music show featuring women in Punk for the short-lived KAW community radio in Lawrence, KS. Later Honna moved to New York City and graduated from the Institute of Audio Research in 2002. She moved to Portland later that year and began volunteering at KBOO. She is now part of the Circle A Radio Collective, producing a range of features, speeches, interviews and short documentaries for a political public affairs magazine that airs bi-weekly on KBOO. |
| MIRIAM WIDMAN has been a journalist for more than 20 years - the first decade in print only and then with an increasing emphasis on radio. Reporting has taken her to places ranging from Bradenton, Florida to Shanghai, China and her interests are just as varied. She's covered the international financial markets, monetary policy and foreign exchange and bond trading, as well as adolescent mental health issues, city politics and local development. She has produced features and spots for KBOO Community Radio and Oregon Public Broadcasting and has also filed for Marketplace and worked on a program about Jewish life in Germany for DeutschlandRadio Berlin. |
| PATRIK ANGSTROM POORE is a radical accountant, a scofflaw, and an audio producer residing in Portland, OR. He volunteers much of his free time, hoping that will somehow make things better. He thinks if you do that too, it'll be a little easier, since he has been told that many hands make light work. He suggests, in fact, volunteering for at least three completely different groups, unless you have kids, then one is ok. Because kids are like two volunteer jobs, and then you can enjoy baseball games. He has been making radio seriously since September 2000, and he would really like to interview you someday. |
Chris Andreae interviews Crystal Springs

Erin Sexton-Sayler and Becca Bartleson learning how to record water sounds at Johnson Creek Park in Sellwood

Julie Sabatier points a tiny but high caliber shot gun mic at Crystal Springs and listens to the water.