Broadcasting on 67kHz of 88.5 FM -- Los Angeles
The mission of LARRS is to ensure that those who are print impaired have the same
access to information as those who can read text.
The Los Angeles Radio Reading Service is a project of Community Partners, a nonprofit
corporation. It is coordinated by two people who are blind for those who are blind:
Project Director
Eugenie "Jolie" Mason
Richard Blythe
Chief Engineer
Mike Brady
Listener Advisory Committee
Fran Brant
Training and Orientation
VeAnn Clark
Office Manager
Penny Frazier
Audience Development
Teri A. Grossman
Audio Description Facilitator
John King
Technology Coordinator
Jody Kepple
Director Funding & Development
Kelvin Reese, John Scheibe
Public Relations
Wendy Schechtman
Correspondence Secretary
Member, The International Association of Audio Information
Services
("IAAIS")
Member, State Broadcast Service for the Blind
Member, Southern California Broadcasters Association
E-Mail LARRS on our Comment Page |
LA Times Thursday, September
7, 2000
A Window on the World for the Blind
By ALLISON COHEN, Special to The Times |
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| Bill Parker said reading for
the blind lets him "have some fun every few weeks, while others listening are getting
something out of it." |
Bill
Parker likes to keep his vocal chords lubed and ready to go as a volunteer reader at the
Los Angeles Radio Reading Service, a radio station for the blind.
Twice a month, the actor--who lives in Lake Balboa--reads
news and feature stories from local newspapers for those who cannot. Volunteers read every
day in a program broadcast via a closed-circuit frequency through KCSN-FM (88.5), the
public radio station at Cal State Northridge.
Listeners can tune specialized radios to the reading
service.
"This is live radio, and that's enjoyable," said
Parker, 58, who loves hamming it up for his listeners. "You have to be on your toes
and thinking ahead."
Just minutes before a recent broadcast, Parker and his
co-reader, Eileen Felbinger, 55, of Northridge, arrive at the radio station on the second
floor of the Fallbrook Mall. Newspapers marked with highlighters are handed to them as
they take their seats behind the microphones.
Hours earlier, volunteer Mark Hein, 55, of Woodland Hills
had scoured the morning's papers looking for stories to be read, especially those that
would not be covered by local radio and television stations.
Retired aerospace engineer Jim Veronica, 62, of Topanga
volunteers nearly every day as the show's engineer. He watches the second hand on a large
clock above his audio panel tick to 9 a.m. Then he cues the readers from behind a glass
partition.
While Felbinger reads a front-page story, Parker sips from a
thermos filled with coffee and skims stories he will read next.
Over the next two hours, the two will read news stories
about the start of the new school year, the drought in Texas, even a graphic about
California's ranking first in corn output.
After the heavy news, they will read the astrological
forecast, sports, entertainment and business news--even the comics.
On a recent broadcast, Parker read a piece about a disabled
man who has cheered on a high school football team for 30 years.
As a longtime thespian, it is the unfolding drama that
Parker loves. He yells into the microphone at one point and later pauses dramatically at a
pivotal turn.
When he reached the last paragraph, he spun his finger in
the air to indicate he was wrapping up. Afterward, he took a long swig from a water bottle
and sighed.
"That was a wonderful story," he said when the
eight-minute reading was over.
The Los Angeles Radio Reading Service, one of about 100
similar stations around the country, was founded by a blind computer programmer, Jolie
Mason.
Mason, 45, first heard about the service while living in
Washington, D.C., and was stunned to discover that the greater Los Angeles area did not
have one. She took it upon herself to learn the business, with an 18-month apprenticeship
at a local public radio station.
* * * The station began broadcasting two hours a day in 1995.
Now it broadcasts 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Volunteers read the newspaper Monday through Friday.
Other programming--taped in advance or provided by satellite
from a supplying network--includes readings from Spanish-language newspapers, the New
Yorker magazine, National Geographic, U.S. News and World Report, best-selling books,
science fiction and mystery novels. There's even a show on parenting.
Mason estimates the audience at 700, which is the number of
specialized radios the organization has donated to the blind or visually impaired.
The special receivers can be purchased for about $125 each
from catalogs for the handicapped.
"There are hundreds of thousands of potential listeners
out there," Mason said. "As everyone gets older, they have trouble with their
eyesight."
The station is supported by volunteers, many of whom work in
entertainment. Parker began reading for the radio station seven years ago at an agent's
suggestion when he complained about a dearth of work and auditions.
"The work is done in a very good spirit," Parker
said. "It's a chance for me to have some fun every few weeks, while others listening
are getting something out of it."
Parker was a television director for the Armed Forces Korea
Network in the late 1960s and made hundreds of television commercials in the 1970s and
'80s while living in New York, where he took up theater.
He chuckles through some of the stories he reads and has
cried while reading columnists' more poignant pieces. One of his favorites was written by
a father chronicling his family's travels across the country.
"I can perform that," he said. "I can really
get my teeth in that."
A program guide for the Los Angeles Radio Reading Service is
available at http://www.larrs.org. The organization,
funded through on-air appeals and donations, is seeking volunteers.
Personal Best is a weekly profile of an ordinary person who
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Best, Los Angeles Times, 20000 Prairie St., Chatsworth 91311. Or fax them to (818)
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Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times
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