|
CHICAGO MATTERS: Inside Housing
Mentorship Program
Chicago Matters
has a new component this year with the launching of a mentorship program.
Chicago Public Radio is working with four reporters who are new to radio,
as they to report on issues related housing, this year's topic.
This group of new
reportersVeida Hughley, Cassandra Smith, Silvana Tabares, and Ed
Taylorincludes students from Kennedy-King College, Radio Arte, and
Columbia College, as well as fresh talent from the Chicago community.
As part of the series, each is creating one feature-length report.
The students began
the program in December by participating in an intensive training session
with NPR's Doug Mitchell; Mitchell heads up the network's Next Generation
Radio project in Washington. Armed with their new mini-disc recording
kits, the group set out and began collecting audio.
After completing
his first interview on a story about his family's experiences as one of
the first African-American homeowners in the village of Olympia Fields,
new reporter Ed Taylor confided, "I interviewed
my mom, Corrine Taylor. I was surprised to find that she had an "on-air"
persona. She was, with me, the way she is in public. I learned that it
can take an hour (or more) for a person to warm up and speak from the
heart. It was a lot of fun."
Veida
Hughley, a student at Kennedy-King College, looks into the changing
face of historic Bronzeville, "Chicago's Black Metropolis".
The neighborhood has cycled through the time of its heyday, to a period
of neglect and urban decay, to its more recent revitalization and recognition
as a historic area. Hughley wants to find out what it's like for long-time
residents facing the increased interest in Bronzeville, and what happens
when one's home is deemed historic.
Radio Arte's Silvana
Tabares reports on runaway teens in her community of Pilsen. She sees
her story as a way to explore the changing home life of some Mexican-American
immigrant families, and how American culture affects traditional family
relationships. Exploring personal and emotional issues with young people
has its own special challenges. Silvana has had to approach her young
interview subjects accordingly, relating, "I chose not to interview
them the first day because I learned from previous experiences that it
is better to meet with them directly first and introduce myself rather
than do any actual recording. I wanted to let the young ladies know and
understand my story and what I expect to receive from their perspectives.
Basically, I wanted to break the ice and have a chance to talk and get
to know one another."
Cassandra
Smith, a local writer and veteran girl scout troop leader, profiles
a troop that meets in a battered women's shelter. She'll follow young
girls displaced from their homes as they participate in the troop's regular
activities while making their way through the confusion and uncertainty
of transition.
The mentorship program
is another way Chicago Public Radio is working to diversify its on-air
voice and connect with issues that are important to the city's varied
ethnic and racial communities.
Profiles of the New Reporters:
 |
| Veida Hughley |
Veida
Hughley
Hughley, age
31, is a working mom who decided on a career change two years ago. Leaving
behind a marketing job with a bank, she decided to follow her passion
for radio, acting, and film. A student at Kennedy-King College, Hughley
now hosts her own music show on WKKC on Saturday nights and produces a
news/talk show on the same station.
Hughley grew up the
youngest of 10 children in Chicago's Woodlawn community. She currently
lives in Chatham, a Chicago neighborhood which, she says, is a good place
to raise her children.
 |
| Cassandra Smith |
Cassandra
Smith
Smith, age
51, grew up in Detroit at the height of Motown and says, that sound "was
a part of my everyday life." Her father was a Navy Reservist and
"the house was run like a submarine at war readiness. Everyone had
a rank and an assignment." Smith left home at 18 and was widowed
twice by age 30.
Writing is Cassandra's
third career, one she embraced at the age of 40, "after realizing
my life was half over." Her work has been published in numerous journals
and she has been heard on Chicago Public Radio's Eight Forty-Eight
and This American Life.
Smith now lives in
Hyde Park, because "it's a village. The person beside me in the voting
booth is the same man who sold me fish at the co-op that morning. I see
children grown up from childhood to adulthood. People say 'hello' on the
street."
 |
| Silvana Tabares |
Silvana
Tabares
Tabares, age 22, was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, and works part
time at WRTE FM Radio Arte, a non-commercial, community-and-youth-operated
radio station in the Pilsen neighborhood.
At Radio Arte, Tabares
works as a producer/coordinator for Youth Metro, an magazine-format
program giving youth a voice on different perspectives.
Tabares attends Columbia
College full-time where she is majoring in Radio Broadcast communications.
 |
| Ed Taylor |
Ed
Taylor
Ed Taylor has long been harboring an interest in independent audio production,
and his project for Chicago Matters represents his first step into
the world of writing, recording, and reporting a work for radio.
Taylor grew up in
Olympia Fields, Illinois, and remembers moving there as one of the first
African-American families to buy a home in that area. He is interested
in exploring how his experience differs from the new residents moving
into the more predominately African-American community of Olympia Fields
today.
|