16th Annual Homelessness Marathon Consciousness-Raising Radio Broadcast Live from Brattleboro, VT: Feb. 19th

in case you missed it (icymi), fyi:

16th Annual Homelessness Marathon Consciousness-Raising Radio Broadcast Live from Brattleboro, VT:
Wednesday, February 19th

Press Release (via Homelessness Marathon):

The 2014 Homelessness Marathon –

Wednesday February 19, 2014

The 16th Homelessness Marathon will originate from Brattleboro, VT on the night of Wednesday, February 19th. With this broadcast, we will be returning to our original nighttime format, airing a six hour broadcast from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m., EST.

CURRENT PRESS RELEASE 2014

For immediate release:
Contact: Jeremy Alderson

LIVE FROM BRATTLEBORO, VERMONT –

THE 16TH ANNUAL HOMELESSNESS MARATHON
The Homelessness Marathon will once again bring the voices of homeless people into America’s homes. “I wish we could get their bodies inside too,” comments Jeremy Weir Alderson, the broadcast’s founder, “but we’re doing the best thing we can, by showing America why this problem should be, can be and must be solved.”

The broadcast, which has previously originated from Detroit, Kansas City, and Katrina-ravaged Mississippi, among other places, features live discussions with homeless people. It is a rare opportunity to see life through their eyes. The broadcast even takes calls, so people in their homes can talk with homeless people on the streets.

The 16th Annual Homelessness Marathon will start at 7 p.m., EST. Wednesday, February 19, 2014 and will run for six hours until 1:00 a.m. Its audio signal will be available for free to all radio stations over the Public Radio Satellite System, the Pacifica Ku-band and Pacifica’s Audioport. Live video of the broadcast will be carried by Free Speech Television (FSTV), starting at 8:00 p.m., EST on Feb. 19th. FSTV has channel 9415 on the Dish Network and channel 348 on DirecTV as well as a webcast.


About the Homelessness Marathon:
http://news.homelessnessmarathon.org/2008/09/brief-history-of-homelessness-marathon.html

A brief history of the Homelessness Marathon

I founded The Homelessness Marathon in 1998 as an offshoot of, “The Nobody Show,” which I then broadcast weekly on WEOS, an NPR and Pacifica affiliate in Geneva, NY. That first year, I was thinking of it purely as a matter of conscience. I was born and raised in New York City. There was no problem with homelessness there when I was growing up, and I was heartsick to see what was happening. So I basically just wanted to get on the air and say, “This isn’t right, and I want no part of it.”

Of course, I did whatever I could to make it a good broadcast. I tried to bolster my argument with the opinions of experts and the voices of homeless people. And I got the idea to broadcast from outdoors in the dead of winter, because I thought it might be a way to dramatize the plight of people with nowhere to go in the cold. But it never occurred to me that this was something I’d ever do again. So I liken this to falling in love with a poor girl and then discovering that she’s rich. I was really surprised by the reaction I got.

People brought me coffee throughout the night, without my even having asked for it. And when I got off the air, people dug into their pockets for crumpled up bills to help defray my expenses. I really don’t think this was because the broadcast, itself, was so good (believe me, we’ve gotten a lot better since). But it was obvious that the concept had seized people’s imaginations, and how often does that happen?

So I decided to put the Marathon up on the NPR satellite, and we’ve just grown every year since. More and more volunteers have come on board, and more and more radio stations too. The 7th Marathon (in 2004) was carried on 80 stations with another 30 in Canada carrying a parallel Canadian Homelessness Marathon.

As the Marathon has grown, its philosophy has evolved. When I started, I thought I had to scold people and tell them why they ought to care, but now I know that Americans really do care, and that no matter how grave the failings of our society may be, homeless people aren’t on the streets because that’s where we, as a people, want them to be. So I’ve backed off a lot. I now mostly look at the Marathon as giving people the reasons for what they already know in their hearts.

Jeremy Weir Alderson
aka “Nobody”
Director, Homelessness Marathon

For more information, visit the Homelessness Marathon Website:
http://news.homelessnessmarathon.org/

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