Rustbelt Radio
Appearance
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2024) |
Genre | News, Current affairs |
---|---|
Running time | 1 hour |
Home station | WRCT 88.3FM Pittsburgh |
Syndicates | WPTS-FM, WDUQ-LP, WNJR, WIUP-FM, WKCO-FM, WOBC-FM |
Produced by | Pittsburgh Indymedia collective members |
Original release | May 2004 – present |
No. of episodes | 150+ |
Website | http://radio.indypgh.org |
Podcast | Rustbelt Radio |
Rustbelt Radio is the Pittsburgh Independent Media Center's weekly radio program which introduces itself as "news from the grassroots, news overlooked by the corporate media".[1][2]
Production
[edit]Rustbelt Radio is produced by a volunteer collective working primarily in the Pittsburgh area. Volunteers conduct interviews and record events. They then edit the audio using Audacity, a free and open-source digital audio editor. The show is organized each week using a wiki in a collaborative process. The show is produced, recorded and aired live on Monday evenings from the studios of WRCT-FM.
References
[edit]- ^ Staggenborg, Suzanne (2020-10-15). Grassroots Environmentalism. Cambridge University Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-108-47848-9.
He later heard about a Marcellus Protest general assembly after listening to Rustbelt Radio, the local Indymedia station.
- ^ O'Baoill, Andrew (2009). Broadcasting in an On-Demand World Creating Community Radio in the Era of Podcasting and Webcasting (Thesis). OCLC 740441737. ProQuest 304897886.
The second was a workshop focused on the internet-based production process in use at Rustbelt Radio, based out of the Independent Media Center in Pittsburgh.
Further reading
[edit]- Daley-Maurer, Lauren (24 July 2013). "Rusted Out: Rustbelt Radio goes off the air". Pittsburgh City Paper.
- Daley-Maurer, Lauren (9 January 2013). "On the Record with Rustbelt Radio reporter Don Carpenter". Pittsburgh City Paper.
- "Pittsburgh Indymedia's Rustbelt Radio expands to weekly schedule and is picked up by a second station in West Virginia" (PDF) (Press release). Pittsburgh Independent Media Center.