From Prime Time Radio
| Part of the Prime Time Radio series
| 01:01:52
Producers: Rachel McCarthy; Janelle Haskell

Older Americans continue to suffer disproportionately from the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Two years after the storm devastated the Gulf Coast, many of its older victims have found themselves unable to either reclaim their previous lives or begin to build new ones. In this special edition of Prime Time Radio, writer Barry Yeoman captures stories of the elderly - affected by Hurricane Katrina.
PRIME TIME RADIO
TIMINGS AND CUES:
00:00 - 01:00 Billboard (promotes both halves)
01:00 - 01:05 Silent Pause (allows cutaway to newscast)
01:05 - 28:04 Segment #1 (optional fundraising cutaway between 24:00-26:00; Outcue to alert stations to cutaway: "I'm Mike Cuthbert. This is Prime Time Radio.")
28:05 - 30:05 MOVIES FOR GROWNUPS with Bill Newcott
30:05 - 30:07 Silent Pause (allows stations to cutaway for I.D., weather report, etc.)
30:07 - 30:34 Billboard for Segment #2 (runs :27)
30:35 - 54:00 Segment #2 (optional fundraising cutaway between 48:00-50:00; Outcue to alert stations to cutaway: "I'm Mike Cuthbert. This is Prime Time Radio.")
54:00 - 54:05 Silent Pause
54:05 - 59:00 "PRIME TIME POSTSCRIPT" (optional module for stations that do not insert a newscast at the top of the hour)
59:00 - 59:05 Silent Pause
59:05 - 59:25 :20 Promo
59:25 - 59:30 Silent Pause
59:30 - 59:59 :29 Promo
Daniel Costello
Posted on August 20, 2007 at 03:36 PM | Permalink
Review of Voices of Katrina
These are deeply personal stories of those hardest hit by the catastrophe. Once I got past the cheesy series theme music, I was drawn in for the whole hour. This is a fantastic use of the medium's best asset--the ability to convey emotion. It doesn't get bogged down in preachyness, though--it just tells the people's stories in their own words.
Although the series is targeted to the issues of a specific age group, this special does a great job of making the story accessible to all audiences. It explains the specific problems of the elderly, and why those problems made them the hardest-hit group of those affected by Katrina. The stories are well-chosen and woven together with strong but not intrusive narration.
This is a realistic portrait of an important social issue that doesn't cross over into activist journalism. I might quibble a bit with the musical choices and timing for scoring, but I think that's more a matter of taste.
Take advantage of the news hole, the optional module on Wavy Gravy is good but you should use it somewhere else where it matches better content-wise. I recommend this special for any type of station.