Hearing voices radio program




















They wondered why it takes so long to give justice to the leaders, to the victims of the Khmer Rouge. This understanding, to her, is crucial in allowing the country to move on from the trauma incurred during the Khmer Rouge era. In a country that is still mainly rural with low levels of TV or internet penetration, radio is a vital mode through which the court can access the public and spread information on what it is doing.

The show has over two million listeners — not weighted towards any age range in particular, says Phanapha, based on the callers who phone in with their comments and views. But it goes deeper than that. In a country still heavily dominated by patriarchal structures, the fact that the show is produced almost entirely by women puts it in a unique position to tap into stories and perspectives that, more often than not, stay hidden.

The callers generally respond to the content of the show, and the team tries to ensure the topics covered are appealing to their diverse range of listeners. The people who listen and engage with the show are what drive Phanapha. Carling, Ph. I must confess, I was disturbed by the sudden realization that I have been treating schizophrenia for four years, yet I have never known what it really was.

Sample a sound byte from the hearing voice simulation mp3, KB Please be advised: Contains mild profanities. Patricia E. Deegan, Ph. She also publishes and lectures internationally on the topics of recovery and empowerment.

Pat is a person with a psychiatric disability, who also has experience hearing voices that are distressing. Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review. Electronic version available Note: The Hearing Voices Curriculum is now available as a virtual training. Two audio diaries about character and change: a street kid who decides to wise-up and a person born in the wrong body. We hear two people documenting their own personal transformation. It was a world unto itself, ten blocks of low rent hotels, bars and liquor stores, all sandwiched in between the gritty Tenderloin, City Hall, and the ritzy Nob Hill: a home invented by people who had no other home.

A Transom Radio special. The final part of this two-hour special: A century ago the six Crow Reservation Districts came together for a cultural gathering with other Great Plains tribes.

In a team of NPR producers and recordists spent a week collecting sounds and interviewing people at this annual event with the Crow people: the Apsaalooke Nation.

A century ago the six Crow Reservation Districts came together for a cultural gathering with other Great Plains tribes.

In a team of NPR producers and recordists spent a week collecting sounds and interviewing people at this annual event. This early ambient sound-portrait breathes with the arts and activities of the Crow people. Part one of two. First-person accounts from all sides of adoption. Stories about living with questions and searching for answers. We hear from birth families mothers, siblings and a father , adoptees both kids and adults , and various adoptive families including open adoption and international adoption China.

Producers for Transom. A Transom. They share great stories and wonderful previously-unheard tape of Studs himself. Obscure tours and offbeat retreats thru Americana: Filmmaker Tony Buba takes the Long Haul Productions team around his hometown of Braddock, Pennsylvania, a once thriving steel town, now one-tenth the town it was in population.

Scott Carrier transports visiting Tibetan monks around the U. And writer Mark Allen tours Universal Studios and pretty much loses his mind.

And a poem by singer Annie Gallop about the poem that unleashed her love of horses. Musicians minds sometimes work differently. Mickey Hart takes us on an audio tour of his extensive worldwide percussion collection. Negativland turns their NPR interview into audio art. Musicians In Their Own Words surveys the sonic spectrum of musicians warming up for a performance. And host Jake Warga does a good deed, for which he ends up assaulted, bleeding, and hospitalized.

Women almost exclusively ran the station. They read the news, interviewed local celebrities, and spun popular records. Scott Carrier introduces a junta-threatening Burmese rock band, Iron Cross.

The second of our three hour-long retrospective of the Aughties. The first of a three hour-long retrospective of the first decade, of the century, of the millennium. A survey of selected speech, song, and soundbites from thru Producer Adam Allington rides along with a policeman and Elvis impersonator.

Composer Phillip Kent Bimstein plays ball with the St. Mark Allen fears a toy poodle — the most evil entity known to man. Matmos mixes music with North American Mammals. Norman Strung demonstrates the shrill sound and thrill found in calling for elk.

And Alex Chadwick visits hunts wildlife and the wild life in Idaho. A 40th anniversary survey of the year in an hour: the Moon landing, Woodstock, Altamont, Stonewall, Vietnam.

The year in speeches songs and soundbites. Writer Charles Bowden reports from the US-Mexico border about the drug wars, the poverty, and the environment. His writing is harsh but unflinchingly accurate. Host Scott Carrier has a sound-portrait of Bowden, told by the people he has written about.

Jean Shepherd used words like a jazz musician uses notes, winding around a theme, playing with variations, sending fresh self-reflective storylines out into the night. Among them was Harry Shearer, who hosts this two part tribute. Sonic transmissions from deep in our solar system are sent back by Voyager I and II.

Musings by poets Langston Hughes and Carl Sandburg. While teaching fifth grade in a Chicago public school, Esme Codell kept a journal. Go to school, keep your grades up, go to college. What if just leaving your apartment, and walking up the block is risky? What if it feels safer to stay home, keep a low profile. When you do go out, head somewhere safe, like the teen center. That was the world of African American teenager, Jesse Jean. He lived a half block from host Katie Davis in their DC neighborhood.

Jesse was lucky enough to get a scholarship to a private boarding school. Katie kept in touch with him. We hear three stories covering seven years. For Memorial Day, two stories recorded in Vietnam: In , a young Lance Corporal carried a reel-to reel tape recorder with him.



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