Radio.
.If I Get Out Alive narrated by Diane Keaton
If I Get Out Alive is an award-winning one-hour public radio documentary narrated by Academy Award-winning actress and child advocate Diane Keaton. The program, the result of a one-year investigation, exposes the systematic abuse and brutality faced by juveniles in the adult prison system. The program aired on public radio stations across the country and featured first-hand accounts from children currently behind bars, rehabilitated youths who survived the system, parents of young people who died in adult prisons, legal experts, policymakers and correction officials.
.Vietnam: Radio First Termer
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The Infinite Mind
The Infinite Mind is the independently produced, national weekly public radio series examining all aspects of the human mind, neuroscience, and mental wellness from scientific, cultural and policy perspectives.
The Infinite Mind was for a decade public radio's most honored and listened to health and science program. The one-hour weekly program received 30 major broadcast journalism honors including a U.N. Media Award, five National Headliner Awards, and three Gracie Awards.
The series featured leading reseachers, clinicians, policymakers, writers, artists and comedians. Its groundbreaking coverage helped create a national dialog on such issues as Autism (1998); Hoarding and Clutter (1999), Bullying (2003), Aspergers' Syndrome (2004); and Teen Suicide (1999). The program was also credited with being the first and only broadcast to cover the issues surrounding trauma and PTSD for the months following the September 11th attacks.
The more than 250 episodes of the program are available on-line at the LCMedia webstore.
The Infinite Mind was for a decade public radio's most honored and listened to health and science program. The one-hour weekly program received 30 major broadcast journalism honors including a U.N. Media Award, five National Headliner Awards, and three Gracie Awards.
The series featured leading reseachers, clinicians, policymakers, writers, artists and comedians. Its groundbreaking coverage helped create a national dialog on such issues as Autism (1998); Hoarding and Clutter (1999), Bullying (2003), Aspergers' Syndrome (2004); and Teen Suicide (1999). The program was also credited with being the first and only broadcast to cover the issues surrounding trauma and PTSD for the months following the September 11th attacks.
The more than 250 episodes of the program are available on-line at the LCMedia webstore.

