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The Day After...

From: KRCB Voice of Youth
Length: 00:06:37

The day after a 16-year-old is shot dead by sheriffs, we visit a town of teens in mourning. Read the full description.
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Piece Description

A bucolic countryside... a progressive community... a teen shot by sheriffs. Journey with Voice of Youth to find out where Jeremiah Chass lived and died, the day after his death. Hear the irreconcilable difference between how he was know by friends and how we was reported to act by the police... and how there's one thing about Jeremiah that shouldn't matter, but does.

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Review of The Day After...

" The Day After" gives us a very realistic look into what alot of teens are facing today, the death of their fellow peers and friends. This story takes place the day after the shooting of a 16 year old boy in his home town. The producers go around and talk to the peers of this young teen, Jeremiah, and get a first hand reaction from those who knew the victum. This way of coveying the information to us is very effective because many of the younger generation go through this everyday and we don't know how they take really feel about it rather than only feeling sympathy for the situation you don't know the whole story behind. This piece reveals what teens feel after an event like this has occured first hand, in their own town.

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Review of The Day After...

"The Day After", produced by Voice of Youth deserves credit for its intentions and its success in capturing the grim calm in a small town the day after a violent tragedy. Throughout the piece one can sense our journalist's good-natured eagerness to report all that they see and this does a great deal to win over the listener. From our reporter's ride into the town until their departure they evince a charming naivety (deftly describing the countryside as "green and grassy") but also a strong feeling of empathy towards the victim and his friends. This is no more palpable than in their efforts to stay unbiased when they find out that the student who was shot was also black or that his principal callously referred to him in an announcement as "the subject." However, from our reporter's obvious dedication to the story and the piece's emotional energy, one can't help but expect a deeper exploration of the story's controversy. It could almost be said that Voice of Youth created a piece with even more potential than they could use. That said, the compelling narrative, and powerful atmosphere of the piece keep one rapt, and that speaks volumes for the piece as a whole.

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Review of The Day After...

Once upon a Monday morning in March 2007 a sixteen-year-old high-school junior went wild, began chanting, and threatened his six-year-old brother with a knife. Their mother witnessed the ruckus and dialed 911. In due time sheriff's deputies arrived and tried to disarm the teenager. Unable to do so with pepper spray, without tasers, they sustained minor injuries and begged the beserk boy to back off -- before drawing their guns.

You know the rest. The story happens every day. The fact that it happened in scenic Sonoma County, California seems incongruous. Sebastopol, a well-to-do community north of San Francisco, is better known for its vineyards than for its violence. The day Jeremiah Chass died stands out like the bitterest grape in wine country.

Voice of Youth staff members from KRCB do a probing investigation the day after Chass's death. They drive to the scene and interview several of Chass's Analy High School classmates, who describe him as a nice guy, helpful. One young man recalls how he and Chass talked about going to college. No one has any idea about why Chass flipped his lid.

Almost exactly midway into this superb drop-in, a young KRCB reporter wonders aloud whether Chass's being African-American had anything to do with his being shot. None of the interviewees sees any kind of racist link. But we are left with a question mark while the reporters scout out the neighborhood where Chass spent his brief life.

Flowers, candles, poems and paintings constitute a makeshift shrine memorializing the dead young man -- as Cub Scouts troop by and blend into the serene landscape near Chass's house. In the background, along with wailing police car sirens, the haunting strains of Moby's "One of Those Mornings" comprise an elegy for an enigmatic J.C. character you will want to hear about for yourself.

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http://www.krcb.org/voice_youth/index.htm