Soundprint_news_09-00033: The Orphan Train/Fishing for my Master: Slavery in Ghana
Series: SOUNDPRINT weekly series (News Hole Compatible)
From: Soundprint
Length: 00:58:56
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This program is offered to current SOUNDPRINT MEMBER stations as a free alternative to our weekly (full 59 minute) Soundprint feed. If you are interested in broadcasting this Newshole-Friendly version of Soundprint, but are not a Soundprint Member Station, please contact us (BEFORE DOWNLOADING) about a trial period or other options at (301)317-0110 . Thanks for reading carefully!!
**** PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS ****
The Orphan Train
"The Orphan Train" is an unnarrated documentary about one of the least known and yet most significant social experiments in American history. In September 1854, the first "orphan train" carried 46 homeless children from New York City to far off homes to become laborers in the pioneer West. It was the first step in what was to become the emigration of as many as 250,000 orphan children to new homes throughout the entire United States. Some children found kind homes and families, others were overworked and abused. Widely duplicated throughout its 75 year history, the original orphan train was the creation and life project of the now forgotten man who was to become the father of American child welfare policy. This documentary features interviews with surviving orphan train riders, as well as readings from historical newspapers, letters and journals, and is laced with classical and folk music.
Fishing for My Master: Slavery in Ghana
All along Ghana's Cape coast, the old granite fortresses are now museums, bitter reminders of the colonial slave trade. Grim-faced tourists pay to see the musty dungeons, rattle the rusting chains, and open the doors that led to the slave ships. But just down the road from the Cape Coast museums, slavery isn't about roots and it isn't about history. Today in Ghana, somewhere between five and seven thousand children ply the waters of Lake Volta, fishing. They have masters. They don't get paid. They don't go to school. And if they try to escape they are beaten. The going rate to buy a five-year-old child is ten dollars - cheaper now than it was 200 years ago when people were being loaded onto ships. The story of modern child slavery in Ghana isn't straightforward or simple. Even the villains of the piece have a case. It's a story of trade-offs between development and grinding poverty, between school and food, between children and parents and police. There is no quick-fix and no easy ending here. In the middle of it, an unassuming man named Jack Dawson uses whatever transportation he can find - rusty van, old bicycle, strong feet - to take him to where the child slaves are. So he can begin the extremely delicate process of trying to save at least a few of them. It's in the bustling marketplace of Yeji, a city on the shores of the man-made Lake Volta, that the children are first sold. And that's where CBC producer David Gutnick begins his documentary, called: Fishing for My Master
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Piece Description
This program is offered to current SOUNDPRINT MEMBER stations as a free alternative to our weekly (full 59 minute) Soundprint feed. If you are interested in broadcasting this Newshole-Friendly version of Soundprint, but are not a Soundprint Member Station, please contact us (BEFORE DOWNLOADING) about a trial period or other options at (301)317-0110 . Thanks for reading carefully!!
**** PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS ****
The Orphan Train
"The Orphan Train" is an unnarrated documentary about one of the least known and yet most significant social experiments in American history. In September 1854, the first "orphan train" carried 46 homeless children from New York City to far off homes to become laborers in the pioneer West. It was the first step in what was to become the emigration of as many as 250,000 orphan children to new homes throughout the entire United States. Some children found kind homes and families, others were overworked and abused. Widely duplicated throughout its 75 year history, the original orphan train was the creation and life project of the now forgotten man who was to become the father of American child welfare policy. This documentary features interviews with surviving orphan train riders, as well as readings from historical newspapers, letters and journals, and is laced with classical and folk music.
Fishing for My Master: Slavery in Ghana
All along Ghana's Cape coast, the old granite fortresses are now museums, bitter reminders of the colonial slave trade. Grim-faced tourists pay to see the musty dungeons, rattle the rusting chains, and open the doors that led to the slave ships. But just down the road from the Cape Coast museums, slavery isn't about roots and it isn't about history. Today in Ghana, somewhere between five and seven thousand children ply the waters of Lake Volta, fishing. They have masters. They don't get paid. They don't go to school. And if they try to escape they are beaten. The going rate to buy a five-year-old child is ten dollars - cheaper now than it was 200 years ago when people were being loaded onto ships. The story of modern child slavery in Ghana isn't straightforward or simple. Even the villains of the piece have a case. It's a story of trade-offs between development and grinding poverty, between school and food, between children and parents and police. There is no quick-fix and no easy ending here. In the middle of it, an unassuming man named Jack Dawson uses whatever transportation he can find - rusty van, old bicycle, strong feet - to take him to where the child slaves are. So he can begin the extremely delicate process of trying to save at least a few of them. It's in the bustling marketplace of Yeji, a city on the shores of the man-made Lake Volta, that the children are first sold. And that's where CBC producer David Gutnick begins his documentary, called: Fishing for My Master
Broadcast History
This News-Hole-friendly version of SOUNDPRINT is produced in tandem with our weekly Soundprint series, which feeds Friday afternoons via PRSS and is aired on member stations throughout the following week
Please note:
This program is offered to current SOUNDPRINT MEMBER stations as a free alternative to our weekly (full 59 minute) Soundprint feed. If you are interested in broadcasting this Newshole-Friendly version of Soundprint, but are not a Soundprint Member Station, please contact us (BEFORE DOWNLOADING) about a trial period or other options at (301)317-0110. Thanks for reading carefully!!
Timing and Cues
Program Time: 59:00
File Format: MPEG 1 Layer II (.mp2) 256kbps from 16 bit 44.1kHz
File Size: 108 MB
SOUNDPRINT 1: The Orphan Train
SOUNDPRINT 2: Fishing for my Master:Slavery in Ghana
SOUNDPRINT (NewsHole-Friendly) will be available Fridays at 1200 Eastern Time via PRX, the Public Radio Exchange, at: www.prx.org/series/11955
Do NOT pull left channel only. Sum to Mono is OK
***DETAILED CLOCK RUNDOWN***
00:00 - 00:59 SOUNDPRINT Billboard
00:59 - 01:00 BLACK
01:00 - 06:00 NEWS HOLE
06:00 - 28:59 SOUNDPRINT 1: The Orphan Train
-[In cue: "Welcome to Soundprint, I'm Lisa Simeone..."]
-[Out cue: "...up next on SOUNDPRINT"] @ 28:54
-[followed by :05 theme music. Please note that music ends cold]
28:59 - 29:00 1 second black
29:00 - 29:59 Music bed[an opportunity for stations to do local forward promoting and underwriting credits]
29:59 -30:00 1 second black
30:00 - 58:29 SOUNDPRINT 2: Fishing for my Master:Slavery in Ghana
-[In cue: "Welcome to Soundprint, I'm Lisa Simeone..."]
-[Out cue: "...I'm Lisa Simeone"] @ 58:26
-[followed by 00:03 theme music. Please note that music ends cold]
58:29 - 58:30 1 second black
58:30 - 58:59 Music bed[an opportunity for stations to do local forward promoting and underwriting credits]
58:59 - 59:00 1 second black
Additional Credits
SOUNDPRINT is produced by the Soundprint Media Center, INC in association with WAMU and American University.




