|
|
 |
David
C. Barnett started off behind the microphone at an early age.
In the mid-1950s, his dad bought the first reel-to-reel recorder in their
Chicago neighborhood. David C. fondly recalls being "interviewed"
by his own father about the pressing issues of the day (as perceived by
a two year old). In 1963 the Barnetts moved to Cleveland and DCB promptly
fell under the spell of Ghoulardi, staying up late on Friday nights and
turning blue. At the same time, David was becoming entranced by the possibilities
of his Dad’s tape recorder. He started producing his own DJ shows
and adventure stories. He also started experimenting with editing, doing
such things as rearranging one of President Johnson’s State of the
Union speeches. With such a firm grounding in media production, it was
only natural that David enroll at Cleveland State University as a Communication
major. At the urging of Cleveland radio legend and mentor Bill Randle,
DCB followed-up his B.A. with a couple of Master’s degrees from
Kent State University, where he first became acquainted with Public Radio.
He came to WCPN in 1990 with an arm-full of taped interviews and an idea
about producing a story about the 1970 Kent State shootings. The compelling
program “Emily’s Diary” was the result, assembled by
producers Kathleen Cerveny and Jim Goldurs. David has subsequently produced
many award-winning programs and is a semi-regular contributor to National
Public Radio news magazines. His documentary productions about American
musical pioneers Woody Guthrie and Hank Williams (both engineered by 90.3’s
Al Dahlhausen) have been nationally syndicated by Public Radio International.
Paul
Cox is the producer of the morning news programs on 90.3 and he doubles
as associate producer of the Feagler and Friends weekly program
on WVIZ/PBS. Paul will soon mark 30 years in the broadcast industry, most
of that as a working journalist, editor and news manager. Immediately
prior to arriving at WCPN, Paul was a reporter and public affairs host
at Cleveland television stations WOIO and WUAB. A Detroit-area native,
he’s worked his entire professional career in Ohio in just about every
function radio and TV have to offer. Duties have included news reporter,
play-by-play sportscaster, drama critic and storm-chaser. If he can stand
the excitement, he hopes to make WCPN/WVIZ a permanent home. Oh, and like
Jim Traficant, he’s the son of a truck driver. Unlike Jim Traficant, he
doesn’t have to be available for lock-down every night.
Dick Feagler is a featured columnist for The Plain Dealer and host of the weekly interview program Feagler & Friends on WVIZ/PBS. A native of Cleveland, he graduated from John Adams High School and Ohio University. Following service in the Army and a stint with the Sandusky Register, he signed on with the Cleveland Press in 1963 as a general assignment reporter. His feature column ran in the Press from 1970 until the paper's demise in 1982. Throughout the 1980s, Feagler's columns ran in many northern Ohio newspapers, including the Akron Beacon Journal, the Lake County News-Herald, the Lorain Journal, the Painesville Telegraph, and the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram. In 1993, Feagler signed on with The Plain Dealer, where his columns continue to appear. Dick Feagler's other media roles have included news commentaries for WKYC-TV3 and WEWS-TV5. He served as a senior editor for Cleveland Magazine and contributing editor for Corporate Cleveland. He has appeared on NBC's Today and Tom Snyder's Tomorrow, and many of his commentaries have aired on National Public Radio. Earlier columns have been collected in three previous books: Feagler's Cleveland; Did you read Feagler today?; and I Know I'm Not Supposed to Say This... But I'll Say It Anyway.
Jim
Goldurs is a true 90.3 WCPN® veteran. Having served through 90.3
WCPN®'s tough times (refer to Kit Jensen's bio for further explanation),
Jim has seen the station's birth through its current teenage growth spurt.
And, he was one of the station's first members, to boot! Born and raised
in Cleveland, Jim graduated from Shaker Heights High School. He went on
to receive degrees in Communications from Youngstown State University
and the University of Pittsburgh. Jim has worked in radio throughout Ohio
and Pennsylvania for close to thirty years. Currently, Jim is 90.3's director
of creative projects (fancy, huh?), and sometimes serves as substitute
host for Around Noon. When he's not being creative here at 90.3 WCPN®,
Jim can be found practicing the art of the rub - massotherapy - in which
he's held a license for since 1990. Married, with three children, a dog
and cat, Jim lives in Cleveland Heights.
If it swings, Bobby Jackson probably has it in his collection. As ideastream's Music Director, Bobby is a veritable allmusic.com unto himself, watching over a station CD collection of well over 10,000 and a personal CD/vinyl collection that may well reach 20,000 discs. As part of the ideastream Culture Team, Bobby can be found on APPLAUSE, the WVIZ/PBS weekly arts and culture program and on AROUND NOON, the 90.3 WCPN daily arts and culture program as well and EVENING JAZZ, with special reports and features of local arts luminaries. Bobby brings two decades of public radio experience to his work at ideastream and has racked up quite a few awards along the way. He was awarded the opportunity to attend 1994 NPR's Multi-Cultural Producer's Forum. He has thrice received the National GAVIN Award for Jazz Radio Person of The Year. His radio magazine JAZZ TRACKS received OET awards in 1997 for Program of the Year and Best Cultural Arts Weekly Series. He was the recipient of the 1998 Communicators Awards Crystal Award of Excellence. In 2000, he served as guest host for the nationally syndicated broadcast of WEMU/WDET's Detroit Jazz Festival. In 2001 he was a finalist for the Northern Ohio Live Award of Achievement. When he's not out picking up awards Bobby can be found relaxing with a good book, riding his bike, swimming, or playing Scrabble (a little FYI - were it a word, 90.3 WCPN would count for 11 points).
Rick
Jackson says his current position at ideastream finally combines
everything from his 26 years in journalism, into one job. Hosting the
weekly, live, public affairs program Ideas brings together all
the elements of his service in public and commercial radio, in local and
network television, and in hosting the nationally syndicated public affairs
series Village America, which was seen on PBS during 2002. Long
familiar to Cleveland viewers from his stints as a news anchor for WOIO
and WUAB TV, and from being a news reporter at WKYC TV back in the mid-eighties,
Jackson returned to Cleveland following 5 years in New York City, where
he served as the weeknight anchor of the CBS News broadcast, Up to
the Minute, a four-hour long, live, overnight news program, seen
in 48 states, and in more than 50 foreign nations. Returning to his adopted
home in the late 90’s, the award winning Jackson was again honored,
as a 2001 inductee into Ohio’s Broadcasting Hall of Fame. Returning
to radio at WCPN in 2003, his was the first voice many Clevelanders heard
each morning, as the local host of NPR’s Morning Edition
– before his move from the audio side of ideastream; to its video
partner, WVIZ. What’s his favorite story to cover thus far? Piloting
an F-16 through a series of aerobatics over Lake Erie, during the 2000
visit of the USAF Thunderbirds to the Cleveland Air Show. But back on
the ground, he says what he likes most about journalism, is what he likes
most about Cleveland. “It’s the people.”
Kristina
Kupravicius has been producing the weekly Lithuanian program
on WCPN since 1986. Since 1996, Kristina has been with Judson Retirement
Community as Vice President of Marketing. Prior to Judson, she was involved
with Special Events for the City of Cleveland, May Department Stores and
as a consultant, working on such projects as the opening of the Gund Arena
and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Kristina graduated with a Master of
Arts degree in piano and harpsichord from Cleveland State University.
She taught at The Cleveland Music School Settlement, Regina High School
and had numerous private students throughout the east side.
“You
get a different perspective when you know how this stuff works!”
Slovak Hour host Vladimir Mlynek not only understands
what goes on in front of the microphone, but he even knows what’s
happening inside the microphone. Both Vladimir and his co-host (and son)
Gerald are certified electrical engineers who mix their
technical expertise with a love of their heritage to bring listeners a
weekly sampling of the Slovak culture. Vladimir has been involved in nationality
broadcasting since the late 1940s, and is one of the original nationality
broadcasters to sign-on with 90.3 when the station was born in 1984. One
year later, Gerald was recruited to add an English-speaking voice to the
program. It was an important move for 2nd and 3rd generation Slovak-American
listeners whose primary language is English. The longevity and popularity
of the Slovak Radio Hour can be traced to the devotion of the hosts and
the great strength of the Slovak-American community throughout Northeast
Ohio.
David Molpus joined WVIZ/WCPN as Executive Editor in March of 2006 after a long career at NPR. "I’m one of the luckiest journalists around having gotten to spend most of my career at NPR during its infancy and part of its prime," Molpus says. "It gave me opportunities I never dreamed of growing up in a small town in the Mississippi Delta." Among the memorable assignments Molpus points to his covering the opening of the Watergate trial in 1974, being on the campaign trail with Jimmy Carter in 1976, reporting from Greenland on the U.S. Ballistic Missile Defense base there in the early 80's, accompanying the 10th Mtn. Division into Haiti in 1994, and covering the Pentagon after 9-11. Plus, from time to time, he got to break out of the news mold in interviews with the likes of Wayne Newton, Loretta Lynn, bluesman Junior Kimbrough, Eudora Welty and Willie Morris. He picked up many honors along the way, including an Overseas Press Club award for spot news coverage, the "Outstanding Journalist" award from the Conference Board of New York for coverage of the American workplace and a Neiman Fellowship at Harvard, but Molpus says his proudest accomplishment came outside of journalism when he was still in college at the University of Mississippi. There he sued the university for its notorious "speaker ban" that kept minorities and white liberals from being guest speakers on campus. In 1970, in response to the lawsuit, the federal courts ordered an end to all "speaker bans" at all of Mississippi's public colleges and universities. Today he is Executive Editor for WVIZ/PBS & 90.3 WCPN and oversees all locally produced content. "This is a vibrant and ambitious organization," Molpus says of his new workplace, "working across platforms in a multi-media environment keeps us all on our toes." He says ideastream is also creatively raising the bar for public broadcasting’s role in service to the community. Molpus, his wife Molly and their dog Willie, enjoy their cozy neighborhood in Shaker Heights and plan on making Ohio home for a long time.
Dan Moulthrop is the founding host of The Sound of Ideas®, which airs weekday mornings at nine. He joined ideastream in 2005 as WCPN’s local anchor of Morning Edition. Prior to joining ideastream, Dan lived in the San Francisco Bay area where worked on print, television and video projects, including co-authoring Teachers Have it Easy: The Big Sacrifices and Small Salaries of America's Teachers (with Ninive Calegari and Dave Eggers; The New Press, 2005). He holds a master’s in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley. Before turning to journalism, he taught English at San Lorenzo High School and a variety of subjects at the San Francisco County Jail. Dan’s work has received important recognition; recently, The Ohio Society of Professional Journalists awarded The Sound of Ideas Best in Show for Public Affairs Programs (2007). Dan was also named “Best Local News Refresher” by Cleveland’s Scene Magazine (2007). And though some question his decision to move to Cleveland from the Golden State, he's found he's quite happy living on the East side with his wife and two children.
After
broadcasting a similar show in the 1960s, Joe Nicholls
from Merseyside, England was itching to get back in front of the microphone
when he heard about WCPN-FM going on the air in September 1984. Joined
by other nationality broadcasters, The Sounds of Britain and Ireland began
broadcasting one week after the station debuted. The uniqueness of this
program is that unlike the most other shows that are about only one nation,
Sounds of Britain and Ireland covers five countries - England, Ireland,
Scotland, Wales and the Isle of Man. In 1990, Joe felt something was missing.
After recounting how he enjoyed having guests on the show, he decided
to add another host. After careful consideration of past visitors, Kevin
McGinty of County Mayo, Ireland was added to the roster. It didn’t
hurt that Kevin had been a director and actor of the Cleveland Irish Players
for some time and has a vast knowledge of the entertainment world. An
added feature is a sports report E-mailed just prior to show from Tom
Rizzo of Akron. Tom, who has never met either Joe or Kevin, is not only
the regular sports reporter but also a big fan of the show. It’s
a hectic two hours, but they love it. As Kevin often remarks “where
did the time go?” Away from the station, Joe is a retired newspaper-marketing
representative with many interests and Kevin manages a painting contracting
company. Although good friends, their socializing with each other is very
limited. Due in large part to distance and family life and as Kevin says
“It keeps a fresh approach when we do the program”. This does
not stop them talking on the phone frequently about new ideas for the
show because as Joe says “The show must keep renewing itself”.
Dee
Perry has been a part of the Cleveland broadcasting scene since
1976, having started her career at WABQ-AM, as a jazz host. Dee was born
and raised in Cleveland, and graduated from John F. Kennedy High School
and Cleveland State University. She has also lived and worked in New York
City and Atlanta, and says that Cleveland is still her favorite place.
Dee’s hobbies and interests include photography , motivational speaking,
singing, and acting. She has appeared in several productions at Playhouse
Square theaters, as well as Tri-C, CSU, Karamu, and Ensemble Theater.
90.3 WCPN has been Dee Perry’s radio home since 1989, and she has
performed in several different capacities for this public radio station.
She is currently the host and producer of 90.3’s hour-long daily
magazine talk show, Around Noon, which focuses on visual and
performing arts, cultural trends, and current events. Dee also serves
as host and producer for Applause, WVIZ/PBS’ half-hour
weekly television series which is also devoted to arts and culture.
Since
1987 Dan Polletta has been spending his evenings with
Northeast Ohio jazz lovers bringing them the best of this great American
art form Monday through Thursday from 9PM to 1AM on 90.3. When Dan isn't
playing the music, he's writing about it: be it reviews or recording notes
for albums. Along with recording engineer Al Dahlhausen, he has also recorded
and produced local jazz concerts that have been broadcast on public radio
stations across the country, including performances by Cyrus Chestnut,
Mingus Big Band, and Abbey Lincoln. He's also a voracious reader -- of
anything, from cereal boxes to contemporary American political history
(Whew!). Dan spends quite a bit of time in the kitchen whipping up new
epicurean delights with an occasional trip to the wine rack for further
inspiration. Outside of radio, Dan's greatest accomplishment was coaching
his beloved Ohio State Buckeyes to the 2002 national championship from
his seat in C-Deck of Ohio Stadium.
Musical interests led Bill Rice into radio during the early 80s. While in college at the University of New Haven he spent most of his time at the student run station, acting as Station Manager, Jazz Director and Jazz Jock, Bottle Washer and Hall Monitor. Perplexed at being finally ejected - after all, he had graduated, they told him - Bill moved to Baltimore, where he landed his first real radio job at a little AM outfit. A short time later Bill went to work recording chamber concerts for broadcast at WBJC-FM, the NPR station in Baltimore. He's been a public radio die-hard ever since. He moved to New Hampshire in 1988, wearing a multitude of hats at New Hampshire Public Radio. Finally his fascination with all things newsworthy propelled him into journalism in 1993, and he's never looked back. He served as News Director at two smaller radio stations in Indiana before succumbing to the lure of Cleveland in June, 2000, joining 90.3 on the education beat. Sources say he may stay awhile - he was appointed Assistant News Director at ideastream in 2004, loves Cleveland, and is quite happy living in his adopted home-town of Lakewood. Bill has won numerous awards during his career, including for his reporting on the demise of LTV Steel, Cleveland public school governance, and the growing gender gap in higher education. On the side he is a guitar enthusiast, with a background in folk, jazz and blues playing.
Petro
Tvardovsky graduated from Chernihiv State University in Ukraine
in 1958, majoring in History. He was an educator in his home country for
forty years before moving to the United States with his wife Vira in 1994.
After settling in Parma, he worked as a teacher for three years and then
as principal for four years at the School of Ukrainian Studies. Since
1997, he has hosted the Ukraina program on 90.3/WCPN and he’s
also an editor of the Ukrainian newspaper Visty UZO - both under
the auspices of the Ukrainian United Organizations of Ohio, UZO. Oksana
Rabosyuk is the daughter of Petro Tvardovsky. She graduated from
the Kiev Institute of Foreign Languages in 1996. She worked as a teacher
of English for five years before moving to the U.S. with her husband and
son. She graduated from nursing school in Cleveland and works as an operating
room nurse at MetroHealth Medical Center. Since 1997, she’s worked
with her father on the Ukraina radio program.
Eric Wellman is the regional host of Morning Edition on 90.3. His newscasts and interviews can be heard weekdays 6-9 a.m. Eric caught the public radio bug while he was still in high school. He landed a summer internship at NPR station WBUR in Boston where he worked in their newscast unit. He was hired the following summer as a producer on their syndicated news/magazine Here and Now. Eric was born in Cleveland Heights, but grew up a Red Sox fan on the east coast (he has since severed those ties and roots exclusively for the Tribe). He got his B.S. in Broadcast Journalism at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. Eric’s work has appeared on the BBC in London, the CBC in Canada, and NPR. He even did a stint on a radio station in Strasbourg, France! Eric’s work has been recognized nationally by the Hearst Foundation, and regionally by the Radio-Television News Directors Association, The Society of Professional Journalists, the Associated Press, and the Ohio Association of Broadcasters.
Dr.
Joe Wendel began his broadcasting career in 1961 on former ethnic
radio station, WXEN as a sportscaster! He was the voice of the Cleveland
Stokers, a professional soccer team that was brought over from England
by some local investors. But, the Stokers only lasted a couple of years
and Joe – an Austrian native – turned his radio focus to spreading
the word about Greater Cleveland’s German-speaking citizens. Sports
and radio aside, Joe has also boosted the German culture through his expertise
on the “stomach Steinway” --- the accordion he sports as the
leader of the Joe Wendel Orchestra. This ensemble regularly tours around
the country, playing numerous local festivals, as well as such entertainment
hot spots as Las Vegas and the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City. Music, whether
it is on the radio or on the stage is a labor of love for Joe Wendel.
In addition to being an entertainer, Joe has a long history as an educator,
holding a doctorate in Educational Administration and School Law.
Staff |
Jerry
Wareham
President and CEO
Kit
Jensen
Chief Operating Officer
Robert
Calsin
Chief Financial Officer
Thomas
P. Furnas
Senior Director, Technology
Kent
Geist
Senior Director, Community Development
David
Kanzeg
Director of Programming
Roy
Norris
Senior Director of Educational Services
Maureen
Paschke
Senior Director, Corporate & Foundation Development
Mark
Smukler
Senior Director of Content
Samantha Ainuddin Director/Producer
Wynne Allen Announcer/Operator
John Allenbach Operations Manager
Sofia Andrades Accounting Assistant
David C. Barnett Producer/Host
Dick Barnick Senior Engineer
Michael Becher Production Crew
Janice Belon Systems Operation Support Specialist
Bianca Bertram Underwriting Account Manager
Rita Bigham PreK-12 Staff Development Director
Joseph Billmaier Multi-media Manager
Tom Blasczak Production Crew
Dan Bobkoff Reporter
Liesl Bonneau Production/Program Manager
Regina Brett Program Host
Nat’le Brown Audience Services Representative
Nancy Burce Staff and Services Director (SMART)
Charles Calhoun Technician
Chuck Campisi Announcer/Operator
Jeff Carlton Technical Producer
Robin Carreon Membership Coordinator
Lawrence Caswell Announcer/Operator
Menaka Chandurkar Underwriting Associate
Shelley Cochran Administrative Support Coordinator
Melanie Collier Administrative Assistant
T. Ward Collins Technician
Dale Converse Production Crew
Ron Corby Associate Producer/Videographer (Statehouse)
Paul Cox Reporter/Producer, Morning News
Gretchen Cuda Producer
Al Dahlhausen Radio Broadcast Engineer
Michelle Daley Production Crew
Barbara Dalton Administrative Assistant - Technology
Gerald D’Antonio Systems Integration and Web Technology Director
Deborah Daugherty Program Manager (SMART)
Randy Davis Broadcast Engineer (WCLV)
Dave DeOreo Producer
Farley Dillinger Announcer/Operator
Stephen Dole Announcer/Operator
Thom Dombroski Assistant Chief Engineer
David Duke Project Accountant
Howard Eddie Production Crew
Abe Edison Maintenance Supervisor
Dick Feagler Talent/Host
Julie Fehrenbach Grants Coordinator
Marianne Flippen Member Service Assistant
Tasha Flournoy Reporter
Ella Fong Special Events and Projects Manager
Judy Gibson Member Service Assistant
Maggie Gibson Community Development Associate
Jim Goldurs Producer
Gail Grizzell Foundations Relations Director
Kymberli Hagelberg Reporter
Jack Helbig Technical Producer
Bobby Jackson Music Director
Rick Jackson Host/Producer
Milan Jovanovic Videographer/Producer
Karen Kasler Statehouse Bureau Director
Kristina Keller Accounting Assistant
Linda Kenney Production Crew
Dennis Knowles Producer
James Kolendo Senior Engineer
Dorene Kray Accounting Clerk
Terry Krivak Executive Director (SMART)
Kirk Krizovich Technician
Dale Kwait Senior Engineer
Sally Lewis Senior Engineer
Tim Lowe Traffic Assistant
Tim Lowery Technician
Ellie Mancuso Underwriting Account Manager
Kim MacDonald Human Resource Manager
Kevin McCloskey Traffic/Operations Clerk
Matthew McKenna Educational Services Technical and Production Support Specialist
Jamie Milne Administrative Assistant (SMART)
David Molpus Executive Editor
Toivo Motter Multiple Media Producer
Dan Moulthrop Reporter/Producer
Courtney Muzzio Early Childhood Workshop Coordinator
Ellen Nagy Receptionist/Clerk
Kimberlee Namen Television Traffic And Operations Manager
Peg Neeson Community Relations Director
John Nguyen Production Crew
Marnie Niver Production Crew
Jenny Northern Director of Syndication (WCLV)
Jean O’Malley Educational Services Programming Coordinator
Mike Paliobeis Production Crew
Dee Perry Producer/Host
Jeff Pillivant Technical Producer
Dan Polletta Producer/Host
John Ramicone Distance Learning Director
Bill Rice Assistant News Director
Dave Rodriguez Chief Engineer
David J. Rodriguez Graphic Artist
Mark Rosenberger Local Programming And Production Director
Mary Rought Accounting/Purchasing Specialist
Betsy Russ Educational Services Administrative Assistant
Rachel Sachs Assistant Producer (OGT)
David Schein Engineer (Statehouse)
Joyce Schneider Administrative Support Coordinator
Jessica Schuster Communications Specialist
Dan Sevic Production Crew
Jerry Sgro Production Crew
Jackie Shafer OGT Production Manager
Traci Shaw Traffic/Operations Assistant
Dan Shellenbarger OGT Executive Director
Linda Shellenbarger Systems Operations Coordinator
Joseph Sheppa Internet Producer
Eric Siler Workshop Coordinator
Jan Silla Accounting Manager
Anabelle Singh Systems Administration Director
Heidi Smith Educational Administrative Support
Ed Sobole Field Services Specialist
Dave Staruch Studio Supervisor/Producer
Bob Stern Corporate Support Director
Dave Stewart Production Crew
Phyllis Stokes Member Service Assistant
AnnaMaria Tabernik Program Director (SMART)
Nancy Tatulinski Senior Engineer
Stacie Taylor Radio Traffic Coordinator
Jane Temple Promotion and Continuity Director
Sasha Thackaberry On-Line Learning Coordinator
Nick Tozzi Announcer/Operator
Duane Trabert Technician
Keith Turner Radio Traffic and Operations Manager
Bill Ulvila Production Crew
Karen Valenti Underwriting Account Manager
Mike Vendeland Production Manager
George Viebranz Executive Director (OMSC)/Program Director (SMART)
Eric Wellman Host/Producer
Gary Wenner Announcer/Operator
Bridget Whelan Assistant Producer/Researcher
Barbara Whitlow Announcer/Operator
Joan Williams Benefits and Payroll Coordinator
Frank Wilson Educational Multi-Media Director
David Yee Announcer/Operator
Jean Zeller Individual Giving Director
|
|