- produced by Naquan
- in 2008
Another Election Reflection, produced by Naquan, a student at Vanguard Hifh School.
Another Election Reflection, produced by Naquan, a student at Vanguard Hifh School.
2008 is already here and Radio Rootz is hoping for the best year yet!! Take a listen to our wishes for 2008.
Radio Rootz Special!
As some Radio Rooters prepare for college, they start wondering "How am I going to pay for college and not be broke!" And so, we turned to the experts. Listen to our exclusive interview with financial expert, Carmen Wong Ulrich, and learn how to Battle your Debt Demons!
NYC’s Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT) is holding a series of hearings—one in each of the five boroughs—on the renewal of cable franchises in the city.
This is the audio of last night's Queens public hearing which took place at
Brooklyn Theatre Arts High School takes up a whole city block in Canarsie, Brooklyn. Every single one of the over 2000 students have to pass through metal detectors each morning. A lot of students feel upset about the security system, and how we get treated by the security guards. The Rootz Crew at BTAHS decided to explore this issue of scanning and police in school. We spent several months working on this piece, starting with reading news articles about school violence and policing, then interviewing, listening to our tapes, and deciding on our audience and goal of the story. We hope you like it - check it out!
Tina Salazar Hits the Mardi Gras parade and interviews Biloxi residents interested in voting in the super tuesday primary elections.
Crystal Edwards Hits the Mardi Gras parade and interviews Biloxi residents who share their opinions and interests in voting in the super tuesday primary elections.
Crystal Edwards Hits the Mardi Gras parade and interviews Biloxi residents who share their opinions and interests in voting in the super tuesday primary elections.
Vincent Sather Interviews Bianca Salazar who expresses her feeling on what it's like recovering from Katrina almost 3 years later.
Guiliani said good bye to the primaries last week, leaving too soon for New Yorkers to get a chance to vote for their former mayor. How do New Yorkers feel about this? Were we ready to make Guiliani the next President?
What are the qualities needed to be President of the United States? Well, this is what 5 New Yorkers had to say....
Today is Super Tuesday, but for New Yorkers, it's also the ticker tape parade celebrating the Giants victory on Sunday. Do New Yorkers know just *what* Super Tuesday is, besides something related to the Superbowl?
Radio Rootz students in New York City hit the streets to see what on people's mind this Super Tuesday. Who are New Yorkers going to vote for?
Produced by: Ayana Haith, Kareem Smith and Steven Cheung
Nakia & Rshante hit Pass Christian's Pass parade on Mardi Gras to interview residents and long time Mardi Gras goer's on how they think the parade has changed, especially on what the Mardi Gras festivities are like now almost 3 years after Hurricane Katrina.
Twenty-nine year old Kenardo enjoys free wireless access thanks to a neighbor in his apartment building. He lives in Brooklyn and is a member of the Air Force Reserves.
Originally from Trinidad, 29 year old Kisha now resides in Midwood, Brooklyn. She has her bachelor's degree and works at a day care. Computer prices prevent her from owning a laptop. She also wonders about the difference between dial-up and DSL.
Born and raised on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, 37 year old Maria has a graduate degree and makes under 50K a year. She laments the price and speed of her DSL connection and is thinking of switching back to dial-up.
20 year old retail worker, Saliou, has an Internet connection that's giving him trouble. He wishes access were cheaper and faster.
Shaun, a 33 year old security guard from Brooklyn, uses the Internet to study for his GED and browse YouTube.com. He thinks his access could be cheaper and faster.
Arturo is 30 and lives in Queens. He works in construction and shares a house with five other people, but does not have Internet access at home. If prices were lower and he learned a little more about computers, though, that might change.
Following the devastations of hurricane Katrina, many people were left homeless in Gulfport Mississippi. Two years later, the pace of the rebuilding process is said to be very slow, and the few lucky residents living in FEMA trailers constantly face difficulties when repair is needed. Anchanese Levison of the Mississippi Workers' Center for Human Rights, an advocacy group that helps residents in housing crisis, files this report.
What happens when your community does not receive assistance to rebuild homes and move residents back after a huge natural disaster? What happens when the only union work available is for "able bodied men?" Well, if you are like the women of the Moore Community House in Gulfport, Mississippi, you train your community in construction work and begin doing it yourself. La Wanda White of the Moore Community House has this report from Gulfport, MI.
Hurricane Katrina wiped out the coastline in Mississippi. Many folks who lived their either couldn't afford to rebuild or afford the insurance cost to stay there. So big developers moved in and bought many of the former residents' property. Now 2 years later the major development happening along the coast is coming from large casinos. And residents from the nearby African American communities say the development is changing the face of their neighborhoods. Jason Mackenzie of the North Gulfport Community Land Trust brings us this report.
With little government assistance, too many bureaucratic obstacles to jump through, and an insurance industry that found outs every step of the way, women from all over the gulf coast had to come together to help those in need. One group of women created "Coastal Women for Change" to fill the huge void in Biloxi, Mississippi. They began providing vital services like childcare and information that residents desperately needed but were not receiving such as their land rights and programs available to them for relief. Coastal Women for Change reporters Sharon Hanshaw and Cass Woods bring us this story.
Labor union leaders and employees at Verizon Business and Verzion Wireless have launched a campaign against the telecommunication giant to allow them to unionize. But union leaders and employees claim that CEO Ivan Seidenberg and his administration have been bullying employees who have expressed a desire to join a labor union. Abdulai Bah of the Community News Production Institute reports.
What is Media Justice? Radio Rootz reporters posed this question to a wide range of participants at the New York City Grassroots Media Conference on March 2. Here's what they said. What does media justice mean to you?
In time for the March 11th Mississippi primary, youth from Radio Rootz partner group SAINTS (Students Against Infectious Diseases N Today's Society) hit the streets of their local communities to prepare this report.
The Community News Production Institute goes live on the air, Tuesday March 25th at 10 am, on WBAI 99.5 FM. In partnership with Global Movements Urban Struggles, the amazing members of the Community News Production Institute are launching their inaugural monthly radio show. This month's show is hosted by Christine Lewis (Domestic Workers United) and Donald Anthonyson (Families for Freedom) and produced by Debra Cole (DWU), Abdulai Bah (Nah We Yone) and James Williams (Street Vendor Project).
In this powerful and lyrical piece, Debra Cole, a member of Domestic Workers United, explores the long history of music as a tool for resistance and social change. Tracing the role of music in struggle from slavery through the civil rights movment to the present, Debra mixes interviews, songs, and her own beautiful voice to create a unique meditation on the fight for a domestic workers bill of rights. Debra is a reporter for the Community News Production Institute, where she reports from the streets and parks of New York City, the gathering grounds for the city's domestic workers.
Angela's Life Map
Emilia -"Thanks, No Thanks!"
Emilia's Life Map
BTAHS' If I Ruled the World
Jemima -"Thanks, No Thanks!"
Jhovanck -"Thanks, No Thanks!"
Jhovanck's Life Map
Angela's Thanks, No Thanks!
Lamour -"Thanks, No Thanks!"
Avianna's Life Map
Lamour's Life Map
Chanel -"Thanks, No Thanks!"
Sounds of BTAHS
Elena -"Thanks, No Thanks!"
Avianna's Thanks, No Thanks!
When it comes to digging for music or connecting with old friends, websites like Myspace, Friendster, and Facebook are rapidly becoming the new tools keeping youth in constant communication. Radio Rootz students at Bell Multicultural High School asked their peers what social networking sites they use?
Vanguard students conversed with college students at Hunter college about the elections. Take a listen to what they had to say!
Introducing the very humble and dedicated JAYRE. Born and raised in Spanish Harlem, this upcoming unsigned artist has a unique style all of his own. Fusing together the styles of reggae and techno with pop and Indian influences, JAYRE's music stands out above the rest.
Since the age of 13, JAYRE has had a passion and desire for singing and dancing, creating an eclectic style of dance to a very different genre of music. His dedication and overall essence will surely one day make him a force to be reckoned with.
For more on JAYRE, visit
The Community News Production Institute aired its second live program on Tuesday April 29th at 10 am, on WBAI 99.5 FM. In partnership with Global Movements Urban Struggles, this month the members of CNPI covered the Sean Bell miscarriage of justice, DWU's trip to Albany, Amtrak's new tactic of allowing ICE to make immigration arrests on board, exclusive interviews with exploited guest workers from India, and last but not least, a quick interview with Angela Davis!
Radio Rootz hit the streets once again and this time jumped on the "International" trainline, the 7 train. It was a very interesting day to explore and see how much diversity finds itself in and out of the train while traveling through communities such Jackson Heights, East Elmhurst, Corona and Flushing. In the spirit of diversity and culture, afterward we couldn't rezist enjoying some delicious Chinese food at the Flushing Meadow Mall and later some good old fashioned authentic Mexican food at Plaza Garibaldi. Yummy! But this piece is about our trip on the 7 Train not food. Or is it? Listen for yourself!
CNPI reporters, Donald Anthonyson of Families for Freedom, Teresa Gonzalez of The Street Vendor Project and Abdulai Bah of Nah We Yone recently interviewed victims of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids that are becoming increasingly prevalent in many immigrant communities here in NYC and other cities across the country. These raids are not just leading to the arrest and deportation of immigrants, but they are also tearing families apart. The interviews were made into a radio story that recently aired on Making Contact.
The home and work place of many immigrant families are being raided by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Recently, a New York City resident, whose identity is being concealed for security reasons, received an unwanted visit from immigration agents. CNPI reporter Donald Anthonyson of Families for Freedom recently sat down with the victim to find out what took place that early morning day.
CNPI reporter Abdulai Bah of Nah We Yone recently interviewed a gentleman who's home was raided by agents from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after they had claimed to be police officers. The victim asked his identity be withheld.
Not long ago, the home of Kathy McArdld and her husband Calvin, was raided by ICE Agents who detained and then deported Calvin back to his home country of Jamaica. He was never allowed to say good bye to his three year old son. Kathy, who has been forcibly separated from her husband by US immigration Officials, recently spoke to CNPI reporter Donald Anthonyson of Families for Freedom.
CNPI reporter Teresa Gonzales, a member of The Street Vendor Project, spoke with a lawful immigrant who's home was raided unlawfully by immigration and Customs Enforcement(ICE) agents. She asked her identity be concealed.
Thousands of migrant workers are regularly brought into the Gulf Coast by US based corporations that exploit them and then threaten to deport them if they complain. In April 2006, more than 500 workers from India were lured into this country under false promises. Early this year, some of the enslaved Indian workers walked from New Orleans to Washington DC to protest their illtreatment. They recently came to NYC to express their support for other immigrant workers. CNPI reporter Christine Lewis spoke to one of them, Aby Reju.
In celebration of workers' international day, CNPI reporters take a look at how Domestic Workers and Day Labors are being treated in their work place here in NYC.
Domestic Workers staged a protest in front of the home of an employer who is said to have abused her nanny. CNPI reporter Christine Lewis was there to compile these voices.
On April 25, judge Arthur Cooperman cleared three NYPD police officers of all charges in the killing of Sean Bell, a 23-year-old Black male who was gunned down in November 2006 hours after his bachelor party in a Queens club. CNPI reporter Abdulai Bah files this report for FSRN.
The "N" word, once a deeply offensive derogatory term against African Americans, is today commonly used among our younger generation, and most notably in the African-American and Hispanic communities. Youth who use the word say there are a multitude of interpretations of the "N" word, which they sometimes use as a term of endearment toward one another or of self-empowerment, and it is often heard in Hip-Hop music. So if the term is so utterly offensive to so many, should our youth be able to use it?
Radio Rootz's Kristal Graham investigates whether our freedom of speech rights were put into questi