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Prometheus Radio Project

  • Intro

If you’re sick of stale corporate radio and desperate for local alternatives, you may have heard of the Prometheus Radio Project. The Philadelphia-based nonprofit collective—dedicated to empowering communities and spurring social change through community radio—is a proud antidote to the canned corporate sounds of Clear Channel and other radio behemoths.

More than 10 years after a small group of activists with roots in the pirate radio movement founded Prometheus, the organization is working hard to protect existing low-power FM (LPFM) stations from an industry lawsuit and helping the bipartisan Local Community Radio Act, which would open up more radio spectrum space for nonprofit LPFM stations, finally become law.

But Prometheus’ staff and volunteers are also firmly embedded in the grassroots, lending their skills and energy to community groups ready to build a radio station. Since 2002, collective members have traveled around the country for radio “barn raisings,” helping to raise antennae masts, construct studios and build local, vibrant alternatives to an increasingly centralized and corporatized media landscape.

Prometheus staff members Cory Fischer-Hoffman, Andy Gunn, Andalusia Knoll, Anthony Mazza, Sakura Saunders and Pete Tridish corresponded via e-mail with In These Times in early April.

In 25 words or less, what makes you so special? (Keep in mind that humility, while admirable, is boring).

We are a collectively run nonprofit organization of media activists, organizers and techies fighting for participatory community radio.

What’s the first thing that comes up when your name is Googled?

Our organization’s Web site comes up, along with the Media Ownership Lawsuit in which Prometheus sued the FCC for their attempt to trash the few remaining regulations preventing complete monopoly ownership of our media. We won, and that David and Goliath story has made national headlines and is one small step toward ending the corporate domination of our media.

Shamelessly plug a colleague’s project.

Prometheus works with community organizations across the country to build and operate their own low-power FM radio stations. We worked with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to build and operate their own radio station. The CIW farm-workers in southwestern Florida have won campaigns for better wages and working conditions against the largest fast food corporations in the country. They are currently battling against modern-day slavery in Florida’s fields and taking on food suppliers like Aramark and Sysco to demand an end to exploitation.

Describe your politics

We are collectively run because we believe that all people’s voices should be heard. We work with social justice organizations that are parts of a larger social movement fighting for self-determination. We believe that we live in an outrageously unequal and unjust society and that those most affected by these imbalances must be at the forefront of changing this system and bringing about justice. We recognize that more democratic access and ownership of the media plays an essential role in this process.

(Come up with a question for yourself and answer it.)

How many fingers am I holding up?

This many.

  • Media

Name a journalist whose work you read religiously. Why?

Seymour Hersh. It’s unfortunately so rare to see a journalist who has worked so long and is so well-respected in the “industry” and still speaks truth to power. Helen Thomas comes to mind as well.

What is your favorite In These Times story?

Well, that’s easy: “Mo’ Power for Low Power.” This piece features the Chicago Independent Radio Project—which, along with other groups across the country, is eager to see our airwaves open up for more community radio stations.

What’s a mistake the mainstream media always makes that really gets under your skin?

Mainstream media often provides a narrow view of important issues that face our communities by highlighting the voices of those they consider to be “experts.” These “experts” often claim authority while ignoring those that are most impacted by the topic at hand.

What’s your favorite Web-based tool for your job? Give us a quick walk through on how to use it.

We love the Prometheus maptool. This was created by a former intern-extraordinaire, and it links to all of the low-power FM radio stations on the air. Check it out!

  • Politics

What’s one piece of legislation (state or national) you’d like to see passed right now?

We are working hard, teaming up with grassroots folks from across the country and media justice and reform organizations from the beltway and beyond to pass the 2009 Local Community Radio Act. This important piece of legislation will expand low-power FM radio to cities, towns and suburbs across the country, opening up the airwaves for hundreds or potentially thousands of new, non-commercial, local, participatory community radio stations.

Are you involved with any interesting forms of activism? Could you tell us about any of these projects?

We are working with people across the country to pass city council resolutions in support of expanding low-power FM radio. Resolutions have been advanced in Urbana-Champaign, Ill.; Hartford, Conn.; Boston, Mass.; Lake Worth, Fla.; Minneapolis, Minn.; and Frankfort, Ky. We are also asking people to sign LPFM Now! Postcards and mail them into their Representatives. Phone calls, e-mails, letters, meetings and surprise visits to congressional offices are an important part of this campaign as well.

How can others get involved?

Call your congressperson right now! Tell them that you support The Local Community Radio Act (HR 1147 & S592), and ask them to cosponsor this legislation as a sign of support for community media.

What campaign should we all sign on to right now?

Join the campaign to expand LPFM. Check out our Web site and get involved. Download a city council resolutions toolkit, write to .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) to order postcards and call your congressional representatives now!

  • Personal

How do you get around (bike, public transportation, car)? Why?

Bicycle, but you gotta watch out for those trolley tracks in Philadelphia.

What local media do you depend on?

Prometheus is based in Philadelphia, and the dearth of community media here is what got Prometheus activists involved in these issues in the first place. A few years back however, we were honored to play a role in the re-launch of Philadelphia’s only historical community radio station, WPEB, a progressive, local media outlet serving West Philadelphia.

Have you ever had any run-ins with the law that you’d like to share?

Prometheus grew out of the pirate radio scene, so collectively we’ve had lots of run-ins with the law. It would be silly to go into the details of any one incident, but let’s just say that our interactions with the law have cultivated in us a hearty respect for those who choose to defy the law and face the consequences for what they believe to be right.

  • Culture

What’s the last good film you saw?

Un Poquito de Tanta Verdad, a must-see documentary about the popular uprising in Oaxaca, Mexico, in 2006 and the takeover of the media by women. Community radio transcended simply being a [part of the] “media” but became an essential tool for communications, survival, self-defense and transformation.

What is the last, best book you have read?

Rebel Radio by Jose Ignacio Lopez Vigil, an incredible tale of Radio Venceremos, the guerilla radio station of the FMLN (Frente Farabundo Martíi para Liberación Nacional) in El Salvador.

What trend in popular culture do you find the most annoying?

The replacement of face-to-face conversation and personal interaction with the variety of digital connections we have access to today, whether it’s phone, text, e-mail or whatever. We miss just talking to people—face to face!

What celebrity least deserves their fame?

What celebrity DOES deserve their fame?


View Prometheus Radio Project's profile

MORE 20 QUESTIONS view all
  • Carmen Van Kerckhove

    "I noticed very early on that when people complimented my appearance, they always singled out my European features and not my Asian features," says the founder of Racialicious.com. "I started paying attention to the Eurocentric beauty ideals that pervade much of the world."

  • Nelson Lichtenstein

    “My political awakening occurred when I witnessed the rise of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee,” renowned labor historian Nelson Lichtenstein says. “Courage and commitment in action, what could do more to inspire a young person?”

  • Craig Aaron

    "Fixing the media is key to advancing any issue you care about," says Craig Aaron, senior program director for Free Press. "Whatever your first issue may be, the media should probably be your second."

  • Jessica Valenti

    “We need to give more credit to young women who are doing incredible feminist work,” says Feministing.com founder Jessica Valenti. “Their activism tends to be a bit invisible.”

  • Harry Wray

    "The bike changes consciousness. It connects people – unlike the car, which separates and isolates them," says political scientist Harry Wray, author of Pedal Power.

  • Mikhaela B. Reid

    "Sure, I teared up on election night - and not just because I was happy to see Bush go. But the tears have dried, and the romance is gone," says political cartoonist Mikhaela Reid.

  • Grace Lee Boggs

    "I believe that at this pivotal time in our country's history we need to be struggling to define and begin making the next American revolution," says author and longtime activist Grace Lee Boggs.

  • Billy Wimsatt

    "I believe we need deep transformation at all levels of society, individual and systemic," says Billy Wimsatt, founder of the League of Young Voters. "I hate the game, not the players."

  • Rinku Sen

    "The mainstream media...has no idea how racism works structurally," says Rinku Sen, publisher of ColorLines magazine and co-author of the new book The Accidental American.

  • Bill Fletcher

    "I am an unapologetic socialist. I believe that capitalism is destroying the planet," says longtime activist Bill Fletcher, co-author of the new book "Solidarity Divided."

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