Benjamin Adair is a reporter and producer for The Savvy Traveler. Over the last three years there, he's covered stories about the Central Asian sex trade and a man-made mountain of adobe and latex paint out in the middle of the California desert, among others. His work has been featured by the Third Coast Festival and honored by the New York Festival. He contributes to a range of web sites and magazines, and also helped write the book Gig: Americans Talk about Their Jobs at the Turn of the Millennium . (Audio Doctor)

Jay Allison is a veteran independent broadcast journalist. His work often airs on NPR's All Things Considered, PRI's This American Life and other national programs. Over the last twenty years, he has created hundreds of programs for national and international broadcast, and has won virtually every major industry award, including three Peabodys and the 1996 Edward R. Murrow Award for outstanding contributions to public radio. He is co-producer of Lost & Found Sound on NPR and producer of the Life Stories series which gives tape recorders to citizens, to tell their own stories.

Allison is a founder of the Association of Independents in Radio and is the originator and host of Transom.org, which brings new voices and stories to public radio. He is the Executive Director of Atlantic Public Media (APM,) a non-profit organization he founded to create two new public radio stations in the Cape Cod region. Allison's latest project is The Public Radio Exchange, a new distribution tool for public radio producers and stations. All of this action is happening in Woods Hole, MA, where Allison and his family live. (Trespassing)

A native of Kentucky, veteran documentary filmmaker Elizabeth Barret has pursued an abiding interest in the history, culture and people of Appalachia. She works as a community-based artist with Appalshop, the award-winning media arts center in Whitesburg, Kentucky. Her films, including Quilting Women (1976), and Long Journey Home (1987), have screened at film festivals worldwide and been televised nationally in the U.S. and Europe. Barret is a recipient a NEA Southeast Regional Media Fellowship and a Rockefeller Foundation Film Fellowship. Stranger With a Camera premiered at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival. (Trespassing)

Alan Berliner combines experimental cinema, artistic purpose and popular appeal into compelling film essays. His award-winning films, The Sweetest Sound, Nobody's Business, Intimate Stranger and The Family Album have been broadcast around the world and honored at top international film festivals. He has won three Emmy Awards, received numerous fellowships, and been the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and other arts organizations. He is currently a faculty member at the New School for Social Research in New York City. (Once Upon a Time...The End)

Hal Cannon is the Founding Director of the Western Folklife Center and its famous child, the Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Cannon has received numerous awards, including the 1998 Will Rogers Lifetime Achievement Award and the Utah Governors Award in both the Arts and Humanities. Together with Taki Telonidis, Cannon has created more than 40 radio features and published dozens of books about life in the American West. Their work airs regularly on NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday and on PRI’s Marketplace and Savvy Traveler. (Breakout Session: Interview)

Writer/producer Katie Davis recently received a grant from the CPB to produce a series of radio pieces called Neighborhood Stories, the idea for which has grown out of her 19-year background in public radio and more recent work (since l994) as a community activist in Adam's Morgan, her inner city neighborhood in Washington D.C. (Audio Doctor)

Mandalit Del Barco can be heard filing news and feature stories from NPR's Los Angeles bureau and from South America. She has covered issues such as Latino politics and race relations, and produced documentaries about Latino Hip Hop, Frida Kahlo and other Latino-oriented topics Del Barco was a print reporter prior to joining NPR. She continues to write articles for Latina Magazine and to produce stories for the weekly radio show Latino USA, which is distributed by NPR. (Audio Doctor)

Sherre DeLys is a producer with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Listening Room. She also creates sound installations and soundscapes for public spaces such as galleries, hospitals and botanical glasshouses. DeLys is currently Australia Council New Media Fellow (a two-year fellowship.) Born in 1958 and raised in the southern United States, DeLys moved to Australia after completing a degree in Political Economy from the University of California, Berkley. (Breakout Session: Music / Silver Award winner)

Ira Glass started working in public radio in 1978 when he was 19, as an intern at NPR's Washington Headquarters. Over the course of the next 17 years, he worked on nearly every NPR news show, and did nearly every production job they had, including tape cutting, newscast writing, editing, producing, reporting and substitute hosting. After moving to Chicago in 1989, he produced several documentary series about public schools and about race relations for NPR. He currently hosts and produces the Peabody Award-winning show This American Life . Glass was named the 2001 "America's Best Radio Host" by Time magazine. (These are a Few of My Favorite Things / Gold Award winner)

Lealan M. Jones is co-author of Our America: Life and Death on the Southside of Chicago, a book and recently released Showtime movie, that addresses the obstacles facing today's youth in the inner city. For this work, Jones and collaborator Lloyd Newman are among the youngest recipients of a Robert F. Kennedy Grand Prize Award, a George Foster Peabody Award for journalistic excellence and a Prix ItaliaJones is a student attending Barat College in Lake Forest, Illinois. (Trespassing)

A 1974 Columbia Law School graduate, Robert Krulwich quit the profession after only two months to become Washington bureau chief for Pacifica Radio. From there he took to the air at NPR, perfecting his unique and quirky style by, among other things, recording an opera called Rato Interesso to explain interest rates. Now at ABC News, he appears regularly on Nightline and hosted the network's 1999 primetime summer series, Brave New World. His work on the PBS-TV series Frontline has won him Emmy, George Polk and DuPont awards. (Once Upon a Time...The End)

Margaret Low Smith is NPR's Vice President for Programming. She oversaw this year's launch of The Tavis Smiley Show and The Motley Fool Radio Show. She is now responsible for NPR's music and entertainment units, acquired programs and new program development. Margaret got her start in public radio more than 20 years ago, working the overnight shift under the watchful ear of Jay Kernis and cutting Bob Edwards "two-ways." She later spent ten years on All Things Considered, where she produced everything from election specials to award-winning series — such as Murder, Punishment and Parole in Alabama, and The Mentally Ill Homeless. (Breakout Session: Airtime)
  Gwen Macsai is an award-winning writer and radio producer whose radio essays were heard on All Things Considered, Morning Edition and Weekend Edition Saturday throughout the 1990s. Macsai is also the creator of the sitcom What About Joan, and author of Lipshtick, a book of humorous first-person essays. Macsai began her career at WBEZ-FM (1984-87) and then moved to Radio Smithsonian in Washington, DC (1987-90). After working at NPR for eight years, she relocated to the midwest, and currently lives in Evanston with her husband and three children. (Once Upon a Time...The End)

Before becoming executive producer of Chicago Matters, Julia McEvoy worked as a documentary producer and associate editor for the series, and as a freelance news correspondent for NPR, Latino USA and Marketplace. McEvoy has earned numerous awards for her work, including the Public Radio News Directors Award for a Chicago Matters documentary about rebuilding the West Side of Chicago 30 years after the King riots. (Breakout Session: Airtime)
  Joel Meyerowitz is an internationally known photographer whose work has appeared in over 150 exhibitions in museums and galleries around the world. He has published eleven books of color photographs as well as a book on the history of street photography. Meyerowitz is a Guggenheim fellow and a recipient of both NEA and NEH awards, and his work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art. (Trespassing)

Karen Michel started in radio at the age of 5 as a guest on Kids Say the Darndest Things, then continued her career years later at KUAC FM in Fairbanks, Alaska. From there she eventually became an independent producer, filing for NPR and moving to New York City. Since then, Michel has been a regular contributor to NPR's newsmagazines and has won numerous awards for her documentaries. (Breakout Session: Voice)
  In 1992 Kaye Mortley never really intended to work in radio, although she spent a lot of her Australian childhood listening to it. After studying French literature she found herself back in Sydney, working as a radio producer for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Here she became interested in the "feature" - ‘mind movies’ for the airwaves. Mortley is now based in Paris, where she works as an independent producer for France-Culture, other European broadcasting organizations and the ABC. Her Program Une Famille...a Mantes-la Jolie (A Family...at Mantes-la-Jolie) was awarded the Prix Europa in 2001. (Featuring...the Feature)

Priya Ramu is the Senior Producer of Metro Morning, CBC Toronto's award-winning local morning program. Before that, she was the Senior Producer of Outfront, a forum where Canadians tell their own stories in their own words and styles on the radio. Priya started her career at CBC Radio working as a reporter and documentary maker for both local and national programs in Toronto and Winnipeg. Her work has been recognized by the Canadian Association of Black Journalists, and by the Gabriel awards. (Pushing the Boundaries of Everyday Radio)
  Joe Richman is an award-winning reporter and producer for public radio. He is the creator of the Teenage Diaries series and the founder of Radio Diaries Inc., a New York City-based not-for-profit production company dedicated to helping people document their own lives for public radio. He is also an adjunct professor at Columbia University's graduate School of Journalism. (Once Upon a Time...The End / Bronze Award winner)

Heidi Schultz joined the Cultural Programming Department at Public Radio International in 1991. For the past five years she has worked as Program Manager, Specials & Limited Series. In this position she evaluates program submissions, and recommends specials and limited series for distribution by PRI. Additionally, she advises and assists producers in developing marketing plans. (Breakout Sessions: Airtime)
  Jake Shapiro is Executive Director of the Public Radio Exchange, an online service for peer-review and digital distribution of public radio programming. Previously Shapiro was Associate Director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, and worked as a producer with The Connection , a daily, nationally distributed public affairs program from WBUR. Shapiro is also a musician, composer and co-founder of the independent record label L-Shaped Records. (Breakout Sessions: Airtime)

Taki Telonidis has been producing public radio for 15 years, first with NPR in Washington DC, and more recently with collaborator Hal Cannon of the Western Folklife Center. Their work appears on NPR's Weekend Edition and PRI's Marketplace and Savvy Traveler. From 1994 to 1998, Taki was Senior Producer of NPR's Weekend All Things Considered . Telonidis has received the CPB’s Gold and Silver Awards. (Breakout Session: Interview)
  Steve Wadhams cut his teeth in radio as a studio technician and later a producer at the BBC in London. He moved to Canada in 1974 and joined the CBC as a producer on As it Happens. By the late 1970's he began to specialize in documentary work. Wadhams was one of the founding producers of the the groundbreaking program Sunday Morning and is currently a producer on Outfront. He has won many awards for his work, including a Premios Ondas (from Spain) for innovative radio and a Prix Italia. (Pushing the Boundaries of Everyday Radio)
  Gregory Whitehead has been immersed in audio production and play from early childhood, and has since founded a number of spurious research centers, including the Paul Broca Memorial Institute for Schizophonic Behavior, the International Institute for Screamscape Studies and the Laboratory for Innovation and Acoustic Research (LIAR). His efforts have yielded a wide variety of responses, including awards such as the BBC Award, Prix Futura and the Prix Italia, which he was relieved to discover was not a formula racing car event. (Rocks, Riptides and Buoys: Radio in the Play of the Airwaves)
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