
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
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Vol.
18, No. 16
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Aug. 25 - Sept. 7, 2005
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'Radio Rookies' Share
Their Stories on WNYC
By DANIELLE WHYTE
Two years ago, Veralyn Williams, a senior at DeWitt Clinton High
School, looked forward to attending a prestigious private college. But she
soon learned from her parents she would not be able to attend a private
school because she was not a citizen, did not have a green card and was not
eligible for financial aid.
But then Williams, now a 19-year-old Hunter College sophomore, joined Radio
Rookies, a non-profit program where inner-city teens broadcast their
personal narratives on WNYC radio, the local affiliate of National Public
Radio (NPR). “It’s something that affected me for so long so I chose to
speak about it,” Williams said, adding that she often asked her parents
about her legal status, only to be ignored.
Catalina Puente also had a story to share.
“I had so much on my chest,” said Puente, a 16-year-old Kingsbridge
resident. “Now there’s less weight on my shoulders once I got to speak about
my story.” Puente, a junior at University Heights High School, wrote a piece
about her romantic obsession with another girl.
Radio Rookies aims to take teens from disadvantaged neighborhoods and teach
them to use radio equipment to tell their intimate stories to the WNYC
audience. But before they get on the air, the process begins months before
in the teens’ neighborhoods.
Radio Rookies is based at a different community center across the city each
year.
Professional journalists teach the teens to prepare interviews, develop
their stories, and use computer software like Pro-Tools.
In 2004, the COVE (Community Organized with a Vision of Excellence) in
Norwood hosted the program, though the participants came from beyond
Norwood. The workshops started last summer and concluded this June. The
stories aired June 15 to June 18. Williams’ piece aired nationally on
National Public Radio. The stories will air again Aug. 29 – 31 (see box).
The program directors recruit rookies from schools, community centers and
even off the street. Puente was discovered by one of the program mentors
when she performed at a poetry reading at Bronx Community College. “We just
look for teens who will get something out of the program who would not have
an opportunity like this,” said Czerina Patel, Radio Rookies’ senior
producer.
The Mosholu teens — Veralyn Williams, Catalina Puente, Carlos Gonzalez,
Derrick Hewitt, Miguel Ayala and Francis Torres — produced stories about
aggression, violence and the foster care system. Since Williams told her
story, she feels her life has started to move in a positive direction.
“I’ve been approved and waiting for priority,” she said about her
application for a green card. “Now it’s not just an open-ended question and
me being oblivious. I got to talk to my parents.”
Catalina Puente is no longer preoccupied with her obsession; she now
immerses herself in writing, story-telling and drawing. She attends the New
Youth Connections workshop for Bronx teens, where she works on creative
writing pieces.
Radio Rookies began in 1999 when Marianne McCune, a WNYC freelancer,
encouraged Harlem teenagers to use Columbia University’s radio equipment
when the station was empty during the summer. Patel soon became program
coordinator. She dreamed of something bigger and better and started
workshops and created the name “Radio Rookies.”
“The goal of the program is two parts — to give teens the tools to tell
their own stories and to provide listeners with new perspectives,” Patel
said.
The award-winning program costs about $300,000 annually to run and is funded
by a number of foundations.
“Just to think that so many people are listening to you,” Puente said. “Not
many adults listen to teens. It’s a good way to hear what teens really got
to say.”
Some rookies hoped their broadcasts would break ground with their parents.
“More than anything it was all about the open communication with my
parents,” said Williams.
“I tried to persuade her not to do it,” said her mother, Lois Williams, who
worried her daughter might get deported for broadcasting her immigration
status. “Now I’m very proud of her. I have more respect for her now.
Whatever decisions she makes I’m supportive.”
Patel also praises this particular group of teens for their candid stories.
“All teens are unique and special but in this group there is real courage in
their stories,” she said. “These are all important issues that people do not
like to talk about … but now they have engaged parents and young people to
deal and talk about them.”
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Radio Rookies on the Air
The stories by the Radio Rookies will be re-broadcast on Monday,
Aug. 29; Tuesday, Aug. 30; and Wednesday, Aug. 31 during Morning
Edition (6 a.m. to 11 a.m.) on WNYC 93.9 FM and 820 AM. They can
also be heard on the Web at:
www.radiorookies.org. |
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