"It's like prospectors that are mining for gold. Having something that is just shimmering and so hot and dynamic and compelling, you have to just follow it." - Davia Nelson
There's a new installment of the web-only series . This time, producer Andrew Norton goes behind-the-scenes with the public radio producing duo .
The Kitchen Sisters are Nikki Silva and Davia Nelson. The two have produced intimate, sound rich, unforgettable radio stories. Think and
Where do they work? How do they get people to share such personal stories? Watch:
Here's our original story about the launch of the series, .
Do you dream of taking Joe Richman of Radio Diaries to dinner? Wonder how the Kitchen Sisters get inside those hidden worlds? What does it look like inside Roman Mars' studio?
Well, fellow radio nerd, have we got a series for you. It's called . And it's video. (We know, kind of weird, right?) It's from , a place designed as a "showcase and workshop for new public media."
Personally, I am a big fan of . It started as a tiny radio show (podcast) about design, and morphed into a radio powerhouse. They had a huge Kickstarter campaign which turned the podcast legit. The host Roman Mars now has a staff, that staff has health insurance. And it's just cool to **see** him in the inaugural This is Radio profile:
'This is part of why radio is the way it is the way it. It feels personal to me. It feels like it's just for me. And that's what I love about it.' - Roman Mars
"This is part of why radio is the way it is the way it. It feels personal to me. It feels like it's just for me. And that's what I love about it." says Mars.
Part of what makes the series work are the incredible visuals from producer Andrew Norton.
Public radio guru Jay Allison described Andrew Norton this way: "Andrew is a video guy (and skateboard photographer) who loves radio too, and, in a way, he's using this series as a way to meet all the people he admires, and 'poke around their stuff.'
Before telling stories about radio, Norton told ""
On the Media's Brooke Gladstone also participated in the This is Radio project.
"Radio can be utterly worthless, a waste of time, if you can't get a listener to care," she says:
who will be featured in the project. We will update this story as new episodes are available.