Race: Out Loud

I published a post here back in March after Chicago Public Radio let me know they wouldn’t be airing pre-recorded essays like the ones I used to do for them. But here’s some good news: reports of my radio-essay death were greatly exaggerated. An essay I wrote aired on WBEZ this morning!

At the WBEZ studios, recording my essay. (Photo by Bill Healy, courtesy WBEZ)

I like working with public radio, so after I got that disappointing note I headed over to the WBEZ studios to meet with the Managing Editor of Public Affairs to see if I had any other options. She told me that in their new format they’d be covering topics in-depth from time to time, and that this summer Aurora Aguilar would be producing pieces on literacy, and Cate Cahan would be focusing on race issues. I told her I’d worked with Aurora and Cate before. She suggested I try pitching ideas to them. I pitched. They responded. I wrote. We recorded.

The piece I did for Aurora hasn’t aired yet. The one that aired today is about how blindness can change the way you look, ahem, at race, and Its part of Cate’s Race: Out Loud series. Here’s how WBEZ describes Race: out Loud on its web site:

We’re asking: What would it sound like if people said what they really think and feel about race, about ethnicity? What if they really talked about how it shapes them, their lives, and attitudes? What would we hear, if we listened?

That part about what we might hear if we listened is what motivated me to pitch my essay. And speaking of blindness, I can read Braille, but I’m painfully slow at it. WBEZ radio producer Joe DeCeault has been recording my essays for years, and the two of us developed a system where he puts me in front of a microphone, asks what the first paragraph in my essay is about, then what the second paragraph is about, and I retell the story paragraph by paragraph in my own words. Essays produced by Joe make me sound like I’m just sitting down talking to you, and we’re both pretty proud of how this works.

Race: Out Loud is a special project, though, so they have a freelancer doing the sound work. Bill Healy consulted with Joe about how to pull this off, but knowing that Cate Cahan and I had gone back and forth via email editing and rewriting the essay, Bill thought we needed to record it exactly how it had been written.

And so, after setting me up at the mike and testing my sound levels, Bill whipped out a printed copy of my essay and began reading it out loud line by line. I parroted what Bill said, and once I’d repeated all my lines, he spliced the sentences together, added sound effects and music, and…voila! When my essay aired on Morning Edition in Chicago today, It sounded like I’d read the whole essay all at once.

If you missed hearing the piece this morning, you can read the transcript and hear it online. Young Bill Healy sure rose to the task. He took photos for the online version and wrote some promotional copy as well. And now he can add “recorded a blind woman reading an essay” to his resume, too.

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15 Responses to “Race: Out Loud”


  1. 1 Kim July 30, 2012 at 6:17 pm

    Guess you’re colorblind, too. I’m glad you’re back on the air.

  2. 2 Cheryl July 30, 2012 at 6:26 pm

    Great job, Beth! Glad you’re back on the radio.

  3. 3 Lauren Bishop-Weidner July 30, 2012 at 7:23 pm

    Wow. You keep on pitchin’ like that, Rich is gonna get you a job with your beloved Sox! These essays of yours on public radio brought me to you, and I am eternally grateful for them. You keep ‘em coming.

  4. 4 Lee Deuben July 31, 2012 at 4:47 am

    What a beautiful essay, Beth. I heard it yesterday morning, oops I mean yesterday afternoon, as I was streaming WBEZ into our new home in Oslo. As soon as I heard your voice my ears instantly perked up, and of course, it was another tremendous story. Thanks for that little piece of home.

    • 5 bethfinke July 31, 2012 at 7:05 am

      This is a first!
      !!! And now, just like Bill Healy, I have something new to add to my resume: “Has radio listeners in Oslo.”
      GREAT FUN to hear from you, Lee, and hope things continue to go well for you and Andrew. Thanks for taking the time to listen – and to comment!

  5. 6 Sandy Gartler July 31, 2012 at 10:16 am

    Hi Beth,
    Heard your essay yesterday on WBEZ and it’s powerful messages were outstanding. Congratulations to you and BEZ’s production staff on creating a masterpiece — something that public radio can be proud of. You opened our eyes and our hearts!

    • 7 bethfinke July 31, 2012 at 1:33 pm

      I’m loving all these visual references –opening people’s eyes, giving insight, and so on. I’m going to keep trackof them, they might come in handy for…hmmm…a future radio essay? THANKS, Sandy.

  6. 8 Carl July 31, 2012 at 1:35 pm

    You look like a natural in that studio.

    • 9 bethfinke July 31, 2012 at 1:38 pm

      You know what? Since this was a special project, all of the regular studio space was taken by regular programming. We had to record this essay in the “This American Life” studio — with any luck maybe Ira Glass is reading this post and will realize what a “natural” I’d be on his show…ha!

  7. 10 Melissa H July 31, 2012 at 9:33 pm

    Beth: One of the things I so appreciate about your writing is that the same essay can make me face hard truths and, a few lines later, smile. Thanks again. By the way, the photo of you and your dog is so full of devotion. It warms the very cockles…

    • 11 bethfinke July 31, 2012 at 10:39 pm

      Melissa, I am blushing. Thanks for the compliment, especially high since it comes from a bright and thoughtful person like you.
      As for the photo, I will pass the kudos on to photographer Bill Healy –I wrote him to day to thank him for all the work he did on that WBEZ piece and he said he forwarded my note on to friends and family. So sweet! I think Bill is swell, keep your eyes –and ears –open for him, I am confident you’ll be running across his name a *lot* in the future.

  8. 12 Bob August 1, 2012 at 3:30 pm

    I missed hearing your essay on WBEZ last Monday, but I just finished listening online. That tech person did a great job. It seemed you spoke a bit faster than you’d actually spoken on any other WBEZ essay I’ve heard, but that’s understandable, considering how the message got produced this time. I especially liked the last line.

  9. 13 bethfinke July 31, 2012 at 7:08 am

    Thanks Kim, Cheryl and Lauren. It feels good to be back on the radio. As for that comment above from “writers jobs,” I’m afraid it might be spam? I’ll check it out, stay tuned.

  10. 14 bethfinke July 31, 2012 at 7:23 am

    It was. Spam, I mean. So I deleted it — had a feeling that a comment from anyone promoting jobs for writers couldn’t be for real, writing jobs are so hard to come by. Hope my blog post encourages those of you out there to keep pitching, though


  1. 1 Catching up « Safe & Sound blog Trackback on September 14, 2012 at 10:04 am

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