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Prometheus Press Releases
Prometheus Lawsuit Stays Implementation of New Ownership Rules
September 4, 2003
Study Shows Interference Claims Are Red Herring
July 13, 2003
More Releases
Prometheus in the News
Low Power, High Intensity
Columbia Journalism Review

Prometheus has played a significant role in the struggle by community groups to establish low-power radio stations - a struggle that has involved the FCC, the National Association of Broadcasters, and National Public Radio.

Read the Q&A with Petri
Opposition to Big Media
could invigorate low-power FM radio.
Salon.com
"Low-power radio stations
give voice to diversity of 'underserved' towns"
The Denver Post
"No Power to the People"
Scientific American takes a look at the low-power FM debate

Scientific American studies claims that Low-power FM radio will cause unacceptable interference and concludes that "congress may have been reacting more to political pressure than technical data, which suggest that whatever interference LPFM stations generate will be too low to matter."

More Articles
Prometheus Articles
Special Interest Noise
The NAB/NPR attempt to dupe Congress on interference
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Prometheus Press Center

Prometheus in Pictures

Photos from the Immokalee Barn-Raising on the Web!

Jacques-Jean Tiziou took some amazing photographs of our most recent radio barn-raising, with the Coalition of Immokalee Wrokers in Immokalee, Florida. Experience the hilarity, the ribaldry, and the spunk and moxie that went into setting up Radio Consciencia.

Barn Raising Photos


Prometheus in the News

Station Aims to Give Voice to Migrant Workers.

The Miami Herald's coverage of Prometheus' most recent barnraising, in December.

In an effort to give a voice to migrant workers, dozens of radio techies from around the country descended on the farming town of Immokalee over the weekend to build a community radio station. The radio ''barn-raising'' will probably further raise the profile of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, a group founded in 1996 that has received national attention in recent years for demanding better working conditions for its members, leading a boycott against Taco Bell and exposing slavery conditions on some of Florida's farms.

Miami Herald Article


Prometheus in the News

Barn-Raising on Air: the Prometheus Radio Project

from The Dominion, Canada's Grassroots National Newspaper
by Prometheus volunteer Janna Graham!

In 1998, the FCC literally kicked down the studio door and seized Radio Mutiny's transmitter. As the FCC dismantled what was Philadelphia's only volunteer-run, community radio station, Prometheus Radio Project emerged from the cinders.

Barn Raising On Air


Prometheus Newsletter Article

Radio Activists Take On FCC, Media

To be published in the Community Media Review

In Philadelphia, the ordinarily scruffy activists at Prometheus Radio Project put on our borrowed suits and black sneakers (that could almost pass for dress shoes) and went to court.

Article by Pete Tridish and Jacklyn Ford


Prometheus in the News

Indie Radio Beats the FCC

Rolling Stone
Touches on Ownership Stay and Radio Barnraisings, Focuses on Pete's Clothes

In September, the Bush administration was on the verge of allowing the nation's largest media companies to further monopolize the public airwaves. Then a former radio pirate and his ragtag political group took on the government -- and won.

Indie Radio Beats the FCC


Prometheus in the News

Radio Activists Take On FCC, Media

The Chicago Tribune
Covers the Ownership Stay, And Looks to the Future

It's unlikely that executives at Fox, CBS and NBC or the country's most prominent radio and newspaper chains had ever heard of the Prometheus Radio Project, a group of community radio advocates, until early September. That's when a lawyer from the Media Access Project, a public interest law firm in Washington, D.C., successfully persuaded a federal appeals court in Philadelphia to issue a stay of new FCC rules that make it easier for media companies to buy other media outlets.

Radio Activists Take on FCC, Media


Prometheus Press Release

Prometheus Lawsuit Stays Implementation of New Ownership Rules

Wave of Consolidation Held Back by Federal Appeals Court

Organizers at the Prometheus Radio Project met news of a stay on the Federal Communications Commissions push to deregulate media ownership with enthusiasm yesterday, September 3rd. These new FCC rule changes, changes that would dramatically alter the American media landscape, were blocked from being implemented by the Third Circuit Federal Court of Appeals, in Philadephia, Pennsylvania.

September 4, 2003


Prometheus in the News

Ouray's Low Power FM Station Featured in Westword!

Westword talks with grassroots radio supporters and Prometheus

In a media world that's in lust with new technology, radio seems thoroughly old-fashioned, the equivalent of a bicyclist competing in the Daytona 500. At times, though, it's still better to be Lance Armstrong than Jeff Gordon. Just ask the pupils and staffers at Ouray High School, located in a gorgeous part of southwestern Colorado.

The Message: Power Up! by Michael Roberts


Prometheus in the News

The Rockland Radio Revolution

The Nation visits a local LPFM

In an age of increasingly consolidated media, in which commercial broadcasters blast thousands of watts over dozens of miles, Rockland, Maine's very own low-power FM station is a beacon of grassroots democracy.

The Rockland Radio Revolution


Prometheus in the News

Building Communities on the FM Dial

The Columbia Journalism Review
Examines Low Power FM and Talks With Prometheus

In the increasingly corporate world of radio, low-power FM isn't about how far your signal reaches but how near. These are neighborhood stations with 100-watt signals that travel single-digit miles. They are run by civil rights organizations, by environmental activists, by church groups and school districts. They are voices that have either been pushed out of the radio spectrum or never invited into it, and the appetite for them speaks to a growing need in this country for community.

Low Intensity, High Power
Q&A with Prometheus Radio


News Article

Facing Criticism, F.C.C. Is Thinking Local


By JACQUES STEINBERG, New York Times

With his bid to ease media ownership rules under assault from members of Congress worried by the prospect of greater consolidation, Michael K. Powell, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, said yesterday that he would create a task force to study the "localism" of radio and television stations.

Read More


News Article

Churchton radio station looks to make its mark


By E.B. FURGURSON III, Staff Writer, The Capital

After only few months on the air, low-power radio station WRYR in Churchton is well on its way to meeting the promise of its call letters and motto: "We are your radio!"
The all-volunteer, nonprofit station airs a variety of programming around the clock -- jazz, gospel and bluegrass music and shows on local, political and environmental issues, American Indian music and philosophy and even children's literature and music.

Read More


News Article

Low-powered radio station goes on air Saturday

Alain de la Villesbret. November 14,2002. The Daily World.

The new radio station in Opelousas is brought to town by the Southern Development Foundation, the organization behind the Original Southwest Louisiana Zydeco Music Festival, and the Prometheus Radio Project, a national broadcast advocacy organization.
Read More


News Article

One Station Under God

By Tucker Teutsch III 11/14/2002

Ask yourself this question: How many times has Clear Channel touched you today? The answer is hard to fathom: With an overwhelming majority of the city's billboards, seven radio stations, two TV stations, and countless Clear Channel promoted and housed events on their way to and from San Antonio, it's probably more often than you think. And the Alamo City is not alone - Clear Channel has a grip on almost every major city in the country, and a foothold in nations around the world.
Read More


News Article

Some Things Considered

By Katy St.Clair, October 30, 2002. East Bay Express.

NPR has been a key player in stifling community broadcasting
Read More


News Article

Digital Radio: Small Guy's Ruin?

By Brad King, October 18, 2002. Wired News.

The noise big radio conglomerates are making about digital radio is likely to drown out community radio stations -- dashing small broadcasters' hopes that the new technology would boost their signal.
Read More


News Article

50 Watts of Freedom

By Chris Womak, September 27, 2002. The Austin Chronicle.

Radio activist Pete Tridish of Philadelphia's Prometheus Radio Project has been traveling across the southern U.S., hoping to spread the free-radio gospel by helping community groups take advantage of the Federal Communication Commission's new Low Power FM license.
Read More


News Article

Transmitting joy at full strength

Operators welcome Hispanic radio station's premiere after years of work

By ALESIA I. REDDING, South Bend Tribune Staff Writer September 9, 2002.

SOUTH BEND -- The radiant smile that spreads across Eliud Villanueva's face during the first wondrous minutes of life for local station WSBL-LPFM (98.1) makes a mockery of the description "low-power'' radio.
Read More.


Photos and Video

FCC Showdown

Photos and video from the 1998 Pirate Showdown at the FCC. www.sinkers.org/microradio.


News Article

What A Sound Idea

In Oroville, anyone can be a DJ

Jen Cooper -- Bee Correspondent
Published 2:15 a.m. PDT Tuesday, October 1, 2002
www.sacbee.com

Inside the recording studio, Jesse Louis is always moving.
The 22-year-old radio DJ nods his head to keep the music's beat. His shoulder-length dreadlocks swing underneath black headphones. If his head isn't bouncing, he's tapping his feet or using two fingers to mix bird sounds with a Pink Floyd CD.
Louis is one of about 50 disc jockeys who volunteer their time every week at Oroville's community radio station, KRBS 107-FM. From Celtic music to poetry readings, from show tunes to spoken dramas, it's radio by the community, for the community.
Read More


News Article

Protester Ejected From NAB Exhibit Floor

As close to a dozen individuals held up signs outside of the Washington State Convention and Trade Center Friday morning protesting Clear Channel and corporate radio, Prometheus Radio activist Hannah Sassaman was ejected from the convention floor after unfurling a large "Cheap Channel" banner. Sassaman tells R&R her pass, obtained through trade publication Radio World, was confiscated. The former WXPN/Philadelphia staffer then joined the crowd outside, which was almost outnumbered by uniformed Seattle Police officers. Sandy Johnson, a former Citadel/Modesto, CA employee seeking an LPFM in the market, held up a sign that criticized NAB President/CEO Eddie Fritts, FCC Chairman Michael Powell and Clear Channel's Lowry Mays and Tom Hicks for their role in what Johnson says is a worsened radio industry following the 1996 Telecom Act. "I was a news director and public affairs director," she says. "Since the Telecom Act, we've seen a lot of changes. We don't have any local news or public affairs shows anymore in Modesto." Johnson says her desire for an LPFM signal was hindered by a third-adjacency signal issue and that she's not heard anything from the FCC on her petition in two years.

Blurb from Radio and Records.

Read more related articles and blurbs here



Press Release

Low Power FM Radio Debuts At National Conference

WRYR FM97.5, one of the first of the controversial new low power FM (LPFM) radio stations, will take to the Maryland airwaves in mid-February. The debut of the station will take place during a conference of low power radio supporters, licensees, and station applicants.


Prometheus in the News

"Arundel group to launch low-power radio station"
The Baltimore Sun offers a preview of our upcoming Radio Barn Raising

South Arundel Citizens for Responsible Development (SACReD) "is organizing a radio "barn-raising" for early next year to get the station on the air. The event will bring together volunteers from Prometheus and from other organizations interested in starting low-power stations. Over that weekend, the participants will literally put the station together and flip the switch at WRYR. "This is a grassroots organization," said Deale resident Joe Gibson, the station's volunteer program director. "That's where all good things start, with the heart of the people."

Read the article

 


Press Release

Federal Appeals Court Rules Congressional Restriction on Licenses for Microbroadcasters Violates First Amendment

Center for Constitutional Rights Wins Battle For Community and Grassroots Based Radio

The United States Court Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled today that the Congressional restriction under the Radio Broadcasting Preservation Act that bars individuals previously engaged in microbroadcasting from ever being eligible for a low-power broadcasting license violates the First Amendment.

Read the Release
Read the Reuters Article


Making Waves

Our February Issue

All the latest about low-power FM and the Prometheus Radio Project.

News about the upcoming Barn Raising, plans for a new activist agenda on low-power FM, a demonstration at the FCC this March, and so much more!

Get Prometheus De-livered in the comfort of your own electronic mail box -- register online


New Article

Frequency Free-for-All

Getting a legal, low-power FM station on the air is easier said than done.

"Paul Saunders is a rarity: an applicant for a license to run a low-power FM (LPFM) radio station who actually stands a good chance of being awarded one by the Federal Communications Commission."

From westword.com



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Prometheus Radio Project
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