Word of Mouth

Writer/Producer/Editor
3 x 30 min, audio (1987)
Winner: “Best Arts & Cultural Programming” (Golden Reel). National Federation of Community Broadcasters.

National distribution on 75 public radio stations. This three-part series on storytelling asks psychologists, professional storytellers, performance artists, writers, preachers, lawyers, and others: Why Do People Tell Stories?, Where Do Stories Come From?, and, Who Is Telling Stories Today?

“Talking out loud involves communication – the very nature of community is strengthened by it; silence is like a closed door. I think when stories are not told, something happens to us. Stories, they’re like bread and wine, they’re essential to us.”
— STUDS TERKEL, writer, Chicago, Ill.

Thanks to Spencer Herzog at Creative Sound Concepts, we have recently digitally re-mastered this award-winning, 3-part radio series about storytelling.

Notes From Nicaragua

Writer/Co-Producer/Director/Camera/Sound/Editor
30 min, video (1986) Pegajosa Productions
Winner: “Best Public Affairs Documentary” National Federation of Local Cable Programmers.

Regional PBS broadcast. A music video travelogue through post-revolutionary Nicaragua featuring musician Elise Witt & the Small Family Orchestra.

“We were curious to explore conflicting stories we had read and had heard on the radio, television, and in talking to people who’d been to Nicaragua.” Ms. Witt says, “We wanted to bring back a picture of the people of Nicaragua to the people of the United States.

Southern Network

Director of Programming, responsible for writing and supervising the production of 80 hours of original programming (2 hours daily on two satellite feeds.) Southern Network was a pioneering, ad hoc network established to cover the 1984 primary elections in Alabama, Florida and Georgia before CSPAN, CNN and other networks were providing this kind of in-depth coverage of the electoral process.

Dialogues On Art, Culture & Social Change

Producer/Director
22 min, video (2000) Rockefeller Foundation
Perspectives on contemporary art and social change from some of America’s leading proponents of the work.

Artists from the Rockerfeller Foundation’s PACT program discuss the practicalities of art as a tool for social change.

Who Is telling Stories Today?

From radio talk shows to TV preachers, psychiatrists to stand-up comedians; the final program looks at the impact of change and technology and the implications of a disappearing narrative tradition. These programs feature an engaging blend of anecdote and analysis, woven together in the seamless style of illustration and exchange that imitates conversation.

“If you can tell stories about Lake Wobegon to people from Lake Wobegon and have them believe them even though you made them up, that’s success, that’s a home run for a storyteller! I’ve had members of my immediate family call me after I’ve told a story that was a tissue of lies from beginning to end and ask me if that really didn’t happen. It’s not a talent to admire-or to recommend to children.” — GARRISON KEILLOR, broadcaster, Minnesota

Where Do Stories Come From?

The second part of the series assesses the origins, history and migrations of stories, and asks why narrative has always played such a prominent role in the southern states.

“When you’re talking about an oral tradition, you’re talking about something that goes back and forth–you’re dealing with continual adaption and interpretation. Two people activating something to make it into what they need it to be for their lives at that moment.”
— BARBARA MYERHOFF, anthropologist, Los Angeles, California

Why Do People Tell Stories?

From science and philosophy to the foundation of the major religions, from entertainment to personal revelations; the first program examines the need for narrative, the roles stories play in our lives.

“Long before I wrote stories, I listened for stories…Listening children know stories are there. When their elders sit and begin, children are just waiting and hoping for one to come out, like a mouse from its hole.” — EUDORA WELTY, author, Mississippi