How many people does it take to make radio?
Posted by Kai Ryssdal on Saturday, January 14, 2006
So it occurs to me…as we’re wait to check in for our flight to Chongqing…that you might not be aware of who’s here actually helping the show get on the air. It’s our fault, I suppose. We’ve all been blogging, but I don’t think we’ve really introduced ourselves. Allow me…
Deborah Clark is our project producer. She’s been working with Marketplace for ten years, five full time and five as an occasional free-lancer. Deb started on the China project back in June (!). Anything that happens with the project she’s involved with somehow, from budgets to logistics to editorial content. We see her with her cell phone stuck to her ear a lot, talking to the Marketplace staff back home – our show producers and the executive producer, JJ Yore.
Nate DiMeo is a staff producer at Marketplace, and he’s been doing a good part of the heavy lifting for us. He made our initial scouting trip back in August, spent most of November in Shanghai reporting and producing various segments and elements that you’ve heard – or will hear next week. And he’s gone ahead to Chongqing to get us a bit of a leg up as we head into a week of the afternoon show.
Brett Neely is our production assistant. If we need something done, chances are good we’ll turn to Brett, whether it’s gathering sound or cutting tape or pre-interviewing someone. Jack of all trades might be a good description.
Eric Johnson and Michael DeMark are our audio engineers, and it’s not a stretch to say if it weren’t for them, all you’d hear coming out of your radio would be static. They set up our gear, connect us to L.A. via super-fancy digital phone lines so we sound like we’re right next door, and they make sure all the sound that goes out of here is as good as can be.
Julie Small is our Asia Editor, and she's back home holding everything together. Julie has been involved in the project from the very beginning, and most of what you’re hearing has passed through her hands at least once.
Our Beijing bureau chief, Jocelyn Ford, and her assistant Yu Xiumei, have been our institutional memory for the China project. Whether we need statistics or insight, they're always ready with the answers.
Sam Eaton and Scott Tong aren’t here with us now, but they’ve both done reporting for the project and have added key elements to our coverage.
There are a couple of other people I ought to mention. Luo Tong is our Chinese producer. She’s been working with Deb trans-Pacifically for about three months, helping us make our way over all the hurdles we’ve encountered.
Its not all work and no play,. Deb’s husband Dan is along with us, as is their ten-month old daughter, Lucy. It’s great to run into them at the end of a long day and make a goofy face or two and Lucy to try to make her laugh. And she’s always a hit with the hotel staff. Western babies are still pretty rare here.
Not mentioned, but just as critical, is the whole Marketplace staff back in Los Angeles. We’re getting the best part of the deal, being in China and doing all the reporting and the stories. But none of that matters if our editors, producers, audio engineers and everyone else back home don’t do their parts as well.
So, how many people does it take to do radio? Every last one of us.
Comments
Ni Hao Kai & friends,
Keep up the great work of reporting from China. We have particular interest since we have two daughters that we adopted from China. We have started a small language program for kids in the community and we also started a before and after school language program at our kids' elementary school where one of the classes is Mandarin (Spanish, French, and American Sign Language are the others).
Your reporting will help to bring the worlds together.
Rock on!
Zi dian!
I am a Chinese living in Texas. I have been following your reports all along. I think you all did an awsome job covering China. Thank you. Keep up the good work!
As a China historian who just spent four months in Nanjing last spring, I heartily applaud your China coverage these two weeks. Your reporting is enthusiastic, entertaining, and dead-on accurate in capturing the joy, frustrations, and chaos of Chinese life today.
How did Kai get so fluent in Chinese? He sounds pretty much like a native! Congratulations and keep up the good work!
Thanks for the story on Chongching. My husband, our then 12 year old son and I were there while on a tour to China in 1999. We had some time to kill before cruising down the Yangtze River, and our tour guide took us through a 3-story farmers market. I remember vividly the fish and eels in water, and the fruits and vegetables that were unlike anything available in the US. Our group, especially our son, was the object of a lot of attention. I can't wait until I can go back again to China.
Wow, what a fantastic impressive week of coverage! My seven week old boy Diego usually sleeps through ATC, but woke up last night right when Marketplace came on. It's great to see what teamwork can do. Congrats.
Eric
I have the best time driving home this week! The sheer energy that comes thru your reports is so inspiring that I wish I had been part of the adventure! Thank you all for the time and energy that you have put in to undertake this project. It has been both intelligent and engaging.
This was one of the best public radio series I've ever heard. The mental pictures, audio, breadth of coverage were fantastic. Can you imagine commercial TV doing such a thing and as enthusiastically? I wanted to hear more about the challenges ahead, particularly environmental. Doesn't China realize it is rushing to ruination if it doesn't address the side effects of its instant industrialization?
I spent a year in Hong in 1968-69 as a college junior and went back this past fall for the first time. I wonder if the China of 2050 will resemble HK of 2000?
I would just like to say that I have thoroughly enjoyed listening to marketplace the past two weeks. For thirty minutes every evening during my drive home I was transported to a country clear across the other side of the world. Your team did an INCREDIBLE job of covering a country we know and hear so little about. Please keep up the excellent work!
Your coverage on China was fantastic! I try to catch the original broadcast in the am and pm but am not always able to do so. Thank goodness for your website!
My first trip to China was in 1980, the grand tour with overseas Chinese. When Grandma saw our photos, she said China hadn't changed since she left in 1912 to come to the US.
In 2002, I attended a relative's wedding in Nanjing, wondering if the traditions remained the same from my parents' generation. Before I knew I would be attending, I read an article about the modern weddings now, including the white bridal gown. So I had an inkling of what to expect. It was a joy to experience the modern wedding celebration.
I was astonished at how modern Shanghai is, feeling that I could be in any western shopping mall located in a city with a large Chinese population, such as Vancouver, since one heard Mandarin.
Now retired, I attended the Beijing Language and Culture University during the summer session in 2004. I wanted to see if I could survive as a student, wanted to improve my Mandarin and wanted an immersion experience.
As I am the second generation born in America, I still have much to learn about China and am always yearning for more before it loses its old ways. Being Guangdong ren, I am curious about the other areas of Zhongguo with its quirks. I am amazed how quickly China is changing. My relatives and Chinese friends do not share my passion for China.
Your reporting has been outstanding, covering all aspects of life. I am concerned about the great divide between the rich and the poor. It was the peasants that helped overthrow the KMT to get the current government in. China will have to find a way to bring as many of its countrymen up the economic ladder. If not, what will be the consequences?
I will stay turned to Jocelyn Ford and the rest of the gang to fill us in. I hope Rob Gifford doesn't take too long to return.
Meanwhile, I hope to go back, possibly to teach English but I dread respiratory illnesses, which I had with each trip. You know, the damn pollution.......
Xiexie nimen for a great series!
Posted by: Peter Nelson at January 14, 2006 8:23 AM