Presenting the Past, Ep. 9: PBS NewsHour with Judy Woodruff and Annette Miller

Aca-Media is proud to partner with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to bring you a new special series: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.”

Image: black-and-white photo of a television control room with banks of monitors. The overlay reads: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.” Credits: the AAPB, Library of Congress, GBH, and Aca-Media.

This series features a series of informed conversations with scholars, educators, industry professionals, researchers, archivists, and others about significant events, issues, and topics documented in the more than 70 years of programming available in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection.

FOR MORE ON THIS SERIES, CLICK HERE.

PRESENTING THE PAST EP. 9: PBS NewsHour with Judy Woodruff and Annette Miller

Top: Judy Woodruff (still from a National Press Foundation tribute video); bottom: Annette Miller (still from a Newshour tribute video).

The ninth episode of “Presenting the Past” features Judy Woodruff, anchor and managing editor of the PBS NewsHour, and Annette Miller, former Vice President of NewsHour Productions. The PBS NewsHour Collection in the AAPB includes nearly 15,000 episodes from October 1975 to September 2019, including two half-hour predecessor programs, The Robert MacNeil Report (1975-1976) and The MacNeil/Lehrer Report (1976 – 1983), and the two hour-long series that followed, The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour (1983 – 1995) and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer (1995 – 2009), in addition to the PBS NewsHour (2009 - 2019).

The programs originally aired nationwide on public television stations, five nights a week; starting in 2013, the series added weekend news coverage. Covering national and worldwide news and public affairs, the programs feature interviews with leading newsmakers including presidents, Supreme Court justices, members of Congress, secretaries of state, and world leaders, in addition to coverage of issues in the news related to education, economics, science, health, and cultural affairs. Funding for the digitization of the collection was generously provided by the Council on Library and Information Resources.

In this episode, Woodruff and Miller talk about the NewsHour’s history and their careers working on the series.

Presenting the Past Ep. 8: In Black America with John L. Hanson, Jr.

Aca-Media is proud to partner with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to bring you a new special series: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.”

Image: black-and-white photo of a television control room with banks of monitors. The overlay reads: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.” Credits: the AAPB, Library of Congress, GBH, and Aca-Media.

Image: black-and-white photo of a television control room with banks of monitors. The overlay reads: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.” Credits: the AAPB, Library of Congress, GBH, and Aca-Media.

This series features a series of informed conversations with scholars, educators, industry professionals, researchers, archivists, and others about significant events, issues, and topics documented in the more than 70 years of programming available in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection.

FOR MORE ON THIS SERIES, CLICK HERE.

Presenting the Past Ep. 8: In Black America with John L. Hanson, Jr.

John L. Hanson, Jr., a middle-aged African-American balding man with beard and glasses,  in a red recording studio.

John L. Hanson, Jr.

The eighth episode of “Presenting the Past” features John L. Hanson, Jr., producer and host since 1981 of the nationally syndicated radio and podcast interview series In Black America at KUT Radio in Austin, Texas. In 2019, KUT received a Recordings at Risk grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) to digitize, preserve and make available in the AAPB 745 episodes of the series. In Black America, which began in 1970 and continues to be broadcast weekly, features hundreds of interviews with influential members of the black community in conversation about issues and topics pertaining to Black America, including education, style, economics, social issues, families, culture, literature, and politics. In this episode, Hanson talks about his long career in radio and his work as producer and host of the series.

"Presenting the Past Ep. 7: Documentary Filmmaking with Jean Walkinshaw"

Aca-Media is proud to partner with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to bring you a new special series: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.”

Image: black-and-white photo of a television control room with banks of monitors. The overlay reads: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.” Credits: the AAPB, Library of Congress, GBH, and Aca-Media.

This series features a series of informed conversations with scholars, educators, industry professionals, researchers, archivists, and others about significant events, issues, and topics documented in the more than 70 years of programming available in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection.

FOR MORE ON THIS SERIES, CLICK HERE.

Ep. 7: Documentary Filmmaking with Jean Walkinshaw

Jean Walkinshaw. Image Credit: The American Archive of Public Broadcasting.

The seventh episode of “Presenting the Past” features Jean Walkinshaw, an award-winning documentarian and producer in the Pacific Northwest for over 50 years. In 2021, Walkinshaw contributed 44 public television documentaries and full interviews conducted for the documentaries to the American Archive of Public Broadcasting (AAPB). The Jean Walkinshaw Collection accessible online covers much of Walkinshaw’s lengthy career spanning the years 1972-2008. Her documentaries focused primarily on notable artists, writers, and social, cultural and ecological themes of the Pacific Northwest region.

In this episode, Jean guides listeners through her career and filmmaking process, highlighting titles in her collection available in the AAPB.

Presenting the Past Ep. 6: National Public Radio with Bill Siemering

Aca-Media is proud to partner with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to bring you a new special series: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.”

Image: black-and-white photo of a television control room with banks of monitors. The overlay reads: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.” Credits: the AAPB, Library of Congress, GBH, and Aca-Media.

This series features a series of informed conversations with scholars, educators, industry professionals, researchers, archivists, and others about significant events, issues, and topics documented in the more than 70 years of programming available in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection.

FOR MORE ON THIS SERIES, CLICK HERE.

Ep. 6: National Public Radio with Bill Siemering

Bill Siemering. Credit: Kelly Moffitt; used under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license. Wikicommons, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:William_siemering_KWUM_2017.jpg

The sixth episode of “Presenting the Past” features Bill Siemering, a radio innovator and advocate, who was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in October 2021. As a founding member of the NPR Board of Directors, Siemering wrote NPR's original mission and goals, and as NPR’s first director of programming, led the development of All Things Considered. Siemering developed Fresh Air with Terry Gross at WHYY in Philadelphia, managed WBFO in Buffalo, NY, and KCCM in Moorhead, MN, was the executive producer of the documentary series Sound Print, worked with the Open Society Foundation, focusing on Eastern Europe, Africa and Mongolia, and founded Developing Radio Partners to enrich the programming of local stations in Africa. In this discussion, he reflects on the influences that helped shape his ideas and approaches to public radio programming throughout his career.

Presenting the Past, Episode 5: Latino empowerment through Latino Public Broadcasting

Image: black-and-white photo of a television control room with banks of monitors. The overlay reads: “Presenting the Past: Exploring the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.” Credits: the AAPB, Library of Congress, GBH, and Aca-Media.

This series features a series of informed conversations with scholars, educators, industry professionals, researchers, archivists, and others about significant events, issues, and topics documented in the more than 70 years of programming available in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection.

FOR MORE ON THIS SERIES, CLICK HERE.

EPISODE 5: Latino Empowerment through Latino Public Broadcasting

Immigration protest, Washington, D.C., from The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer: https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_507-8p5v698w0m#at_194.069211_s (MacNeil/Lehrer Productions & WETA, 2006).

The fifth episode of “Presenting the Past” explores the history of Spanish language public radio and television programming and its roots in community activism. The discussion features activists Hugo Morales, Executive Director and co-founder of Radio Bilingüe Inc., and Jesús Treviño, television director, author and creator of Latinopia.com, along with scholars Dolores Inés Casillas, Professor of Chicana and Chicano Studies and Director of the Chicano Studies Institute at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Gabriela Rivera Marín, a doctoral student at the University of Florida studying Hispanic Linguistics and co-curator of the AAPB Latino Empowerment through Latino Public Broadcasting exhibit.