Shared State
Montana Public RadioA collaborative podcast from nonprofit newsrooms across Montana. This series explores the complexities of political beliefs through stories from the real people that shape our state.
Current (https://current.org/local-that-works/page/18/?tax_input%5Bproject-category%5D%5B0%5D=7133)
136 results found.
A collaborative podcast from nonprofit newsrooms across Montana. This series explores the complexities of political beliefs through stories from the real people that shape our state.
Local Live(s) showcases the human side of journalism through live storytelling. Our collaborative events build trust in local journalism and connect reporters to the communities they serve.
The Xylom invites emerging writers to contribute data-driven, first-person reporting on wildfires threatening the places they call home, how humans are making it worse, and equitable local solutions.
Santa Cruz Local investigates what’s being done to address homelessness in Santa Cruz County. We look at programs that have shown promise at addressing homelessness in other parts of California.
The historic Green Book inspired LPB’s Safe Haven: Louisiana’s Green Book, a multimedia digital first series focusing on the businesses & places African Americans turned to during the Jim Crow era.
Minnehistories are bite-sized videos that share pieces of Minnesota history and allow the audience to reminisce or learn about an unfamiliar event, figure, or place in Minnesota history.
This is a docuseries conducted by The Atlanta Voice to explore, reveal and give voice to Atlanta’s homeless population.
A documentary short film project highlighting difference makers in each of the 21 counties in New Jersey
The Dodging Standards series analyzed employment records for social service employees, finding that many county-run agencies in NC defy state law by hiring workers who don’t meet minimum requirements.
The Current sparked police accountability in Brunswick, GA after Ahmaud Arbery’s murder with an investigative project that showed a pattern of implicit bias against Black residents by law enforcement.
“A People’s History of Kansas City” is an award-winning narrative history podcast about the everyday heroes who shaped the region. It centers the stories that have too often been forgotten or ignored.
The Latino Communities Reporting Lab’s mission is to amplify the voices of our local Latino communities. Content is in English/Spanish and shared through print, video, email, social media, and text.
A great story needs to be shared. Amplify Utah finds, supports and showcases diverse voices in collaboration with young journalists, local media, and nonprofit partners and the communities they serve.
Conversation by and for the people of Jackson Hole with journalists from KHOL, WyoFile and the Jackson Hole News & Guide, sharing the stories behind their reporting and building trust in local media.
This limited-run podcast series sheds light on humans living close to nature. In five episodes, Facets explores the passions, tensions and healing that people find while living in a mountain town.
Engaging rural communities throughout South Dakota through storytelling, outreach, and strategic partnerships, to create opportunities for local connection across multiple platforms.
Colorado Postcards tell stories of people, places and things that make the state unique. In just 60 seconds, they feed listeners’ curiosity and foster a closer connection to the place we call home.
We produced 4 virtual field trips that focused on educational and interactive experiences that can be accessed by children anywhere in our viewing area via a website and as broadcast interstitials.
Between The Covers is an opportunity to gather with other like-minded people within our community to read, discuss ideas, and meet great authors of all genres.
The KidVision: Full STEAM Ahead series, led by KidVision’s Miss Penny, will educate children on Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math with seven different fun and engaging virtual events.
Two years ago, the newsrooms of Montana Public Radio, Montana Free Press and Yellowstone Public Radio took on an ambitious collaborative podcast to explain what was driving the candidates and beliefs during Montana’s 2020 election, and where those outcomes could lead us.
The idea for this podcast originally took shape during the 2020 primary election, when anyone who turned on a TV in Montana could see candidates leaning against a fence post, shooting a rifle, fishing a remote stream, shaking hands in a small diner or warehouse and all claiming they’re the best choice to uphold “Montana values.”
This year, we came back together to explore how the stories Montanans tell themselves about what makes a “real Montanan” impact public policy, and to share the nuanced stories of Montanans who are trying to deal with seemingly intractable problems. Over eight episodes, we considered both the political divisions that engross our state and how residents are working through them, as well as how today’s political disagreements can have increasingly far-flung consequences.
We dug into issues surrounding housing affordability, water shortages, conservation, COVID-19, and even the politics of how we die. We had the incredible opportunity to tell stories from individual Montanans confronting profound and personal questions about the politics that affect their personal liberties, a value that almost every Montanan seems to share.
The goal was to translate political rhetoric into a community-driven narrative and offer the general public a new way to engage with politics, as well as to spark discussion among our combined audiences about the nuances of political beliefs.
Shared State’s deeper look at the most important issues and candidates on Montana’s 2020 November ballot was accomplished through a first-of-its-kind collaboration. This year, our series grew into an even more compelling collection of stories detailing the emotionally-charged political beliefs and the complexities of those politics that shape our state. Montana Free Press, Montana Public Radio and Yellowstone Public Radio saw the need and desire within their audiences for political coverage that stepped back from the daily headlines and captured a truer picture of Montana, and we hope to continue to do so.
In addition to framing a model of cross-newsroom collaboration, Shared State has been used as an educational tool in the state’s higher education system. Montana State University has assigned Shared State as required listening for their Hilleman Scholars and multiple professors at the University of Montana have made Shared State required listening in political science, law, forestry and journalism courses. We’ve also hosted a successful listening party in collaboration with the UMT school of Journalism, and high school educators have even used the series as educational material.
We’ve had a great response on social media, with audience members championing the series as “capturing the struggles Montanans are going through everyday and tying that to the political landscape here, thus making me feel like I have a voice.” One listener responded to a call-out from our reporter to tell their highly personal story, simply because they said they had listened to Shared State and trusted the place that produced it.
Shared State has also received recognition with an E.B. Craney Award from the Montana Broadcasters Association as Non-Commercial Radio Program Of The Year. The series’ third episode won first place recognition in the Society of Professional Journalists’ small newsroom division for Audio: Government and Politics Reporting.
It is clear that Shared State accomplished its goal of engaging the general public in a deeper conversation about the values that reflect Montana.
Our members and donors continue to highlight Shared State in their contributions, sharing their deep appreciation for the collaboration and creativity that went into making the program. This project gave our audiences another reason to contribute to this vital public service in Montana, where local, trusted news is desperately needed.