KOSU wins National Broadcast Journalism Award
Monday, August 4, 2008
Peers Recognize Series Produced by Associate Director Rachel Hubbard
(STILLWATER, Okla., August 4, 2008) – KOSU, the state’s public radio (91.7 fm Stillwater-Oklahoma
City, 107.5 fm Bartlesville-Tulsa and 101.9 fm Okmulgee-Henryetta) is the recipient
of a first place award from Public Radio News Directors Incorporated, a non profit
professional association that exists to improve local news and information programming
by serving public radio journalists.
KOSU won first place in the series category, Division C (news staff of 1-2) for “Mali:
An Example of Freedom”, which examined how Mali’s radio industry is helping citizens
learn how to be part of a democratic society. The award was announced last month
during the PRNDI national conference in Washington D.C.
“This award is an example of KOSU’s ongoing commitment to excellence in broadcast
journalism,” said KOSU Director Kelly Burley. “I am very proud of Rachel and the
KOSU news team for their ongoing commitment to produce quality radio journalism stories
that inform, engage and inspire our listeners.”
The series was done as part of a project between the Department of Agricultural Education,
Communications and Leadership at Oklahoma State University and the U.S. Department
of State to spur the fledgling democracy in Mali by increasing the professionalism
of the press corps that monitors politics, business, economic development and other
issues. Members of the Oklahoma media including Hubbard had the opportunity to travel
to Mali to assist in evaluating the current state of the media and then show Malians
how United States journalists practice in a free press when they traveled to Oklahoma
in 2007.
"Mali is a new democracy just like the U.S. once was, and their press corps is new
and learning just like the U.S. press corps once did." Hubbard said. "This exchange
was fascinating because as a member of a developed media system I was able to learn
how even a very basic media system can have a huge impact on society, helping with
everything from health issues like malaria to democracy issues like voting."
In evaluating the KOSU entry, judges said it was “a perfect example of how a small
local station can do an international story that serves the local audience with the
proper context and content of how the community is related to bigger issues across
the globe. This series would be the envy of much larger stations.”
With this latest honor, KOSU has won 17 national awards for broadcast journalism excellence,
including the duPont Columbia, the Edward R. Murrow and the Scripps Howard National
Journalism Award, as well as hundreds of state and regional awards. To hear the KOSU
series “Mali: An Example of Freedom”, and to learn more about KOSU’s new program schedule,
visit www.kosu.org.