Tuning in to New York City's Pirates of the Air

Presented at The Eleventh HOPE (2016), July 22, 2016, 7 p.m. (60 minutes)

Pirate radio in New York City is a homegrown cultural phenomenon that is at once aesthetically vibrant, technologically tumultuous, and undeniably illegal. Emanating from clandestine studios and hidden transmitters, the sounds of Kreyol, Yiddish, Spanish, and Caribbean-accented English waft into the urban atmosphere. On an average night in Flatbush, Brooklyn, it's not uncommon to be able to hear as many as three dozen pirate stations between 87.9 and 107.9 Mhz. This flowering of outlaw micro-radio stations in Brooklyn and throughout the greater New York City region is a major disruption to the status quo of corporate controlled, robo-playlisted mega stations. Their unregulated presence and programming often reflects the throb and hum of a diverse city more authentically than traditional media outlets. Join radio producer David Goren for an audio tour of these stations featuring the music, programs, and personalities that make up New York City's pirate radio scene.


Presenters:

  • David Goren
    David Goren is a radio producer and audio archivist with a focus on broadcast culture. His work has been featured on NPR's Lost and Found Sound series, On the Media, Afropop Worldwide, Jazz at Lincoln Center Radio, and shortwaveology.net.

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