KSER Vision Quest
KSER is on a vision quest – to set goals for service in our next decade -- and we want our members, listeners, friends and supporters to help us.
Imagine a radio station serving yourself and your community. What would it be like? How could it serve you best? How do we get KSER to where it needs to be? What threats and obstacles need to be overcome?
We need your ideas and input on creating the future of KSER! Spread the word – we welcome and encourage perspectives and opinions from all sectors of our community.
You can make your voice heard by participating in a final public meeting, Saturday, March 7th from 9AM-Noon at Public Meeting Room #1 in the Robert Drewel building on the Snohomish County campus.
This meeting concludes a series of 3 public meetings simulcast on KSER over the past week, and will include a recap of public comment submitted online, via email, and in-person during these meetings. You can download background material and notes from previous meetings, or you can listen to archived audio of the broadcasts via links in the comment sections below.
We at KSER are committed to advance the common good in our community through public radio and other services dedicated to arts, ideas and civic engagement.
We are a local media resource that is in a unique position to become a focal point of community life and connect people of the entire region.
We see a historic opening, and we want to take it.
How can we grow to better serve our community?
We can’t answer that question without your help!
Please RSVP below if you plan to attend Saturday's Vision Quest meeting in person.
If you cannot attend the meeting in person, you can email us at BoardPrez@kser.org, reach us by post at:
KSER Foundation
attn: Board of Directors
2623 Wetmore Ave
Everett, WA 98201
Or you can post a comment on our website at the bottom of this page.
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Ronnie James Dio Tribute 5/22/10
Thank you for that one hour tribute to Ronnie James Dio. I have been listening to a dozen MAJOR Seattle radio stations and programs all week to hear at least one song played in honor of Ronnie James Dio, and found NONE. Do they not have the albums in their repertoire? He had the greatest voice in RNR and deserves to be acknowledged. I hadn't heard one single song from the Heavy Metal station nor Alice Cooper's radio show and I don't understand it. It's very sad that so many fans have been cheated this week. So THANK YOU for the tribute. I have felt sad for his loss all week and your tribute was comforting and gratifying.
parent's journal
hi, just writing to let you know that i'm enjoying the Parent's Journal program!! Thanks for adding it. :D
Raquel Monsaas
my perspective
hi, i've been a listener for a few years and became a member during the last fund drive. A couple of times in the past week or two I've had to change the station while driving with my young child because I wasn't comfortable with the lyrics of a song that was playing on KSER. I know that as one of your more conservative members/listeners I won't always agree with everything coming over the airwaves, however I felt as a current member it is important to share my perspective. Thus, as a member/listener, I appreciate lyrics being as 'clean' as possible so that I can listen with my family. I also appreciate when both the 'liberal' and 'conservative' perspectives are considered. Thank you for reading!
Reply to anonymous from Pt. Ludlow
Hear, here!!!! From an 11-year KSER music host.
My 2 cents worth
I have been listening now for a year and would like support the vision of a local sound. I listen to NPR and enjoy it, but if I have a choice of local news that is honest and open, I will always vote with my ears for this. I also believe that there is enough talent in our own neighborhood and we aren't hearing them, it's time for radio open mic! The coming year is going to be a real challenge to all of us in so many ways. If there were a program for sharing our personal experience in living life with frugality. Letting ideas & arts flow freely but goods be used and reused until their usefulness is over.
Recycled Radio?
Audio from Thursday's Vision Quest
Here's the audio from Thursday's Vision Quest meeting and program.
Transcript coming soon...
Bruce Wirth General Manager, 90.7 KSER
Audio from Monday's Vision Quest program
Here's the audio from Monday's Vision Quest meeting and program.
Transcript coming soon...
Bruce Wirth General Manager, 90.7 KSER
Suggestion
Thanks for this invitation to comment.
Over the years I have supported KSER as actively as I have been able from my across the Sound location.
Donations as I could afford, during the years when Ed kept things going on a shoestring. A miracle of survival.
Recently though it seems that success is allowing changes to be afforded, and it sounds like more outside programming is being purchased.
I do not have the time to dig into the budget and I trust the board to keep things financially on track but I suggest that extra funds be put first and foremost into local offerings. If I want to hear Lyn Rosseta Casper talk about food I can go to a big budget station and dig that up. Instead, why not develop a short program with the same host visiting a different restaurant every week? Start with your business believers and speak to the owners about their vision, and talk about the food while they offer a meal to be sampled by the host, including recipes provided by the owner. That might be an easy volunteer to find, and expanding the show beyond current business believers will alert the greater business community to the power of public radio. Probably recruiting more donations. And we don’t need Zorba Paster, when we have the local naturopathic folks. Local first please.
I would prefer to see the long term volunteers who have kept the station going be employed as paid volunteer coordinators, and programming consultants, using the funds available now for syndicated shows. Local first please.
The real value of KSER is as a canvas to exhibit the great genius of local volunteers who are passionate about a particular genre of music, or a focused belief. There are many folks who have such high quality of tastes that it is nearly always spectacular to be exposed to their high grade choices. Like having a wine expert buy you wine rather than the hit or miss of choosing a bottle off the shelf or selecting a CD by it’s cover.
Advertise for more DJ’s, let your new staff volunteer coordinator call for interested parties and start with a short weekly taped presentation that you can air during bbc overnight etc. recruit local genius. Bring on things besides music too, collect the possibilities and sort them out, while making program changes only due to attrition. ( I think here of groups I would never join, and because of that I do not know anything about how they think, like the churches or the military, or the institution of large corporations etc. members of the community I would probably not encounter, but maybe when I could not sleep it would help to have them drone on at 3 am, [one can only be so tolerant] )
Even genres I do not pay attention to are rewarding when selected by the enthusiasts. (I am not of the generation, but I always enjoyed B-sides for example, even when I would never select such music on my own, because it was constantly the best of that noise and worth listening to in order to perceive the art I would never have bothered with except at KSER)
But the big opportunity is one that I can find no good example of currently, that will have to evolve from the listening community over time, and that is a discussion show that can actually become a dialog about local circumstances. I know of no useful format yet discovered that will actually nourish conversation like a great dinner party. But maybe a show called “the party” or “the potluck” , or some form of expanded interaction, a huge multi party conference call?
But that is the potential for public use of the airwaves. Communication. And nothing works like a face to face yet, but radio has the best chance of doing this. And as we are swept along in the major transitions taking place in our world society it will require that true genius and insights come to the surface and we learn to follow and contribute to the great idea, not the great professional expert. We need to invite comments from younger people who are still forming concepts about the world so we learn of their sharp fresh perspectives. The folks who brought us our current economic collapse through their arrogant beliefs, will not be able to offer effective improvements because they are too thoroughly acculturated in a non functional system that has brought us things like prevalent cancers and unsustainable debts.
Also, don’t get caught by the feeling that growth and expansion is the primary measure of success, because we are seeing this paradigm collapse world wide. Community building and communication is a hopeful future and does not require a bigger audience, but will probably create one. So the question about a KSER point of view is difficult. We tend to limit the circle of our friends to those who say things we like to hear, but the world is much bigger than this or bush would have never become president. We need to find out how expansive the world can actually become.
Thanks for asking for input, and try not to just vote on what you air by counting the requests based on popularity. We need exposure to diversity. I find there are certain individuals who reflect my sense of taste in any genre they wish to explore and I want to pass on my sincere thanks for their time and energy spent in sorting through so much music in order to provide the listener with the best of the best from their personal choices.
My life is deeply enriched because of the opportunity KSER provides for many individuals to share their personal passions. Invest in local riches first.
Thanks for your efforts.
Vision Quest Ideas
Hey KSER..
I just read the post from Van Man with a call out for idea for the
vision quest of KSER..
Not sure if this is a new idea.but please keep supporting and
playing local music.play more if you can!
The other thing Everett..needs is a festival to give the city its
identity back..KSER could lead the way one this!!!!!
Ever since the demise of Salty Sea Days..the city has no public
event that gives it a sense of place and culture, a KSER festival
could do that!
The waterfront concerts and parks events are nice but too short and
too "exclusive" ..and the Sausage festival has nothing to do with
the whole city it's just an excuse to pander to a desire for a real
event and showcase pacific rim talent's roster, there's no real
support there for NW artists ..
Take a look at how successful the events are in the surrounding
cities. I have performed at almost all of them, such as Taste of
Tacoma, Bite of Seattle, Edmonds arts fest, Renton River days (who
knew they had a river?) Snoqualmie days, Vashon Island days,
Marysville Strawberry fest (what will they do when the field get
flooded over?)..and on and on..almost every city and town in the
state and the whole region has a local pride festival that gives
them a sense of community and celebrates heritage and culture of the
area. How many of these small towns have a local radio station?
Not many..In the tiny town of Blue Hill Maine with a population of
under 5,000 each summer the local station WERU hosts a very
successful festival that draws attendance from the whole of New
England. The WERU fest features national headliners and local acts
with arts and crafts booths and food vendors for a 3 day event. John
Hightower was a featured speaker when I attended and Richie Havens
and Don McClain where the headliners..now maybe not big time, but
the event was well attended even with a gate fee.
I feel a strong push from your board to the city create such and
event could fill the empty space this is the soul of this city. I am
proud to be raising my kids here as I see promise and future for
them in Everett and the NW as it continues to grow. I just want them
to have some sense of heritage for their hometown. Be it a mill town
or harbor town or simply E town .KSER can lead the way and be a
lightning rod of culture in OUR TOWN.
Rick
Submitting comments
Thank you for your feedback and for your observation that we neglected to mention that you are always welcome to submit your comments by mail or via email:
Board@kser.org
or
KSER Foundation
attn: Board of Directors
2623 Wetmore Ave
Everett, WA 98201
The announcement has been modified above, and I will update our on-air promo ASAP.
Bruce Wirth General Manager, 90.7 KSER
Audio from Saturday Vision Quest Show
Here's audio from Saturday's Vision Quest program. Click on it to play it in your browser, or right click to download it.
http://kser.org/download/KSER_VisionQuest_20090221.mp3
Here are the notes taken by the Board secretary during the program:
KSER Vision Quest broadcast and meeting
Saturday 2/21/2009 2:00pm
Attending the meeting in person.
Brenda Mann-Harrison, Board
Bruce Wirth, Manager, SPOT member
Candace McKenna, Board, SPOT member
Joel Reynolds, Volunteer
John Jameson, Volunteer
Karen Crowley, Board President, SPOT member
Kinuko Noburikawa, Volunteer, SPOT member
Leilani Lamarca, Volunteer, SPOT member
Mike Svob, Volunteer
Peter Dervin, Volunteer, SPOT member
Sandy Thompson Board, SPOT member, scribe of this document.
Ted Sharpe, Volunteer
Callers:
Vance in Everett
Dennis
Spencer (just moved to Snohomish county from Seattle)
Joe in Lynnwood
Don in Snohomish
Betrand in Port Townsend
Anonymous web commenter: “Don’t put syndicated programming on the station. If I
want NPR, I’ll listen to NPR.”
David in Darrington: be local, drop corporate stuff, esp. the Takeaway
Minutes of Discussion
Bruce: What happened to Frettin Fingers? Introduces Karen, studio audience.
Karen: what does Public Radio mean for your life? What should we be doing in
Snohomish country? We started asking questions about a year ago: how we do our work. We created our values and mission statements.
Karen: Radio has become a multimedia experience. Introduces studio audience.
Bruce: Karen, why do we need to look ahead?
Karen: the world is changing rapidly. We value localism. Sno Co is over 650K,
demographic changes, aging and emerging younger community. There are many things happening that will affect us where we live. Who is talking about that? How are we talking about that? And how will KSER as an institution change and respond to that community?
Bruce: What does KSER do for you? What should it do for you and your community?
What would be an example of the kind of feedback we are looking for?
Question: Imagine a radio station that is serving your community – what
would it be like and how could it best serve you?
Ted: I would like to see more on-location live stuff. I was at the Collins building rally
today. I would like to see KSER being out about in community. Arts festivals, music.
Mike: second Ted. There is sort of a perception sometimes that there is not significant
culture in Snohomish County. I think KSER has two roles: to represent & expose what’s going on, and that tends to promote culture as well.
Vance (on phone) I like Vaughn’s program “Vinyl Repair”, Danny’s “Rock & Roll
Time Machine”, John Noe’s “Juke Joint”, Jef Hofman’s “Dusties”. KSER is definitely
about the music. I used to listen to the President’s radio address before you got
Democracy Now. I think KSER should be a music station. I don’t think you have a local news program. I like Jim Hightower, but it cuts out on me. I notice you have HD – do you plan to launch another HD channel?
Karen: Vance started by saying he liked the music, then moved into the local news
content.
Dennis (on phone): I like Bluegrass, Frettin Fingers, Coconut Wireless. I used to work
at a local station in Eastern Washington which had local radio spots of things that were
happening as they happened. I was disappointed to see that KSER was not at the South Everett neighborhood center. I thought ‘what an opportunity they’re missing’.
Bruce: You would like us to be more physically in the community. What would you
like to have coming out the speakers?
Dennis: I didn’t like the Canadian program in the afternoon.
Bruce: We dropped “As It Happens” because we found it was the least listened-to
program.
Dennis: The Native American program seemed to center on the Canadian rather than
US Native American. I used to listen to the Native American program on Sunday
evening. I’m finding that what I’m hearing is a bit of a smattering, a little bit here and a
little bit there. You never know when it’s going to be on. The Scandinavian music is
sometimes interspersed with the Celtic music. Sometimes the website doesn’t match up
with the programming.
Question: Who are our other partners? What events should we be at?
Mike: I was involved with moving the station from Lynnwood to Everett. I am not
sure I know what groups we should work with – Arts Council, Everett Historic Theater, High School, Community College, but I don’t see the legwork being done to get out into the community and actually develop those relationships right now.
Candace: What are we doing to promote the conversations in school boards, city &
county councils and the items that will affect us for years to come?
Bruce: to be out in the community is resource-intensive. It’s hard to get people for all
these events because we often don’t get takers.
Karen (on web): Bringing new or local music to town, more local news reporting,
raising issues.
Karen: you have to want it really bad. The goal comes first, then you perceive how to
get there. If we can name it and see it and smell it, you can find the resources.
Spencer (on phone): just moved from Seattle, A radio station first & foremost should
entertain. We really like the Sunday night lineup. There could be more variety, esp with newer flavors, new music. It would be good to do a concert in the summer or a movie series. I don’t think people appreciate a radio station that doesn’t have commercials until they listen one for awhile, then after they listen, that’s all they’ll listen to. You just need to get more people to listen.
Joe in Lynnwood (on phone): Saturday lineup is fantastic. I’ve been listening since
1.5 yrs ago. I am involved in volunteering at the schools, schools are one of our largest
investments but do a poor job outreaching to the community to show us how our money is spent. If they could do a better job, these bond issues would have an easier time being passed.
Bruce: so should KSER be reaching out to the schools, showing how good the
education is. Should KSER be reaching out to young listeners, to the schools to try to
involve students in producing programming for the station?
Joe: Just don’t put it on Saturday.
Anonymous poster and David in Darrington: we should do local programming only,
screw the syndicated stuff.
Question: Should KSER have a point of view?
Mike: It’s a double-edged sword. KSER has a responsibility to have a point of view,
but also a responsibility to be sure it represents a broad cross-section of the community.
Bruce: we have a range of programs that represent (unions, League of Women Voters,
senior citizen activists, peace activists, we have a finance program)
Mike: Deep down, it’s the dialog that matters. KSER needs to be a forum for that
dialog. The discussion is part of the fun
Email from Hazy Day: more new music, more local programming. Saturday and
Sunday could be rearranged, morning programming is good. Need more volunteers to
work in the community – how do we get them?.
Don (Snohomish): calling to heap praise, just discovered us a year ago. Keep
Saturday like it is. Love classical, old rock, new rock, frustrated my whole life switching stations. Don’t change a thing. The mix is important. Get to hear music would never hear. So I don’t want you to change. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it…I get to hear music on your station that I don’t ever get to hear anywhere else and in my whole life don’t ever get to hear.
Ted: I like to think of the world as a diamond – it has facets. Point of view – we can
be the bridge without agreeing with everything. I don’t listen to what we play that I don’t like. We need the input to be the bridge.
Bertrand (Port Townsend): it’s great that you want to look forward with a strategic
planning process. I have listened for many years. Tend to have more leftist views, but I
miss the more balanced shows like Left Right & Center. A wide variety of political
views not only is interesting but it will involve more listeners. You have Democracy
Now three times a day. I think it would be good to find people who are really dedicated to an art form and would do cameo programming. Even if the presentation is a little fumbling or amateurish, the passion is what matters.
Brian: (Web comment): If it ain’t broke don’t fix it: keep the music you can’t hear
anywhere else.
Karen: we have a value stating we should air voices and ideas you can’t hear
elsewhere. I want to challenge people: how do we get there. The idea struck me that you will see a local play holding auditions for folks – what are the new “how” fresh ways we reach out to folks.
Candace: thanks to everyone who called in. Point of view: we have this frequency, we
serve our community by keeping them as well informed as they can be so they can be
citizens and live the quality of life that they want. When I think point of view I think
inform people to be good citizens.
.
Bruce: our license is to serve Everett and the surrounding communities with a non
commercial educational radio station.
Leilani’s whiteboard notes, taken during meeting
Shouild KSER have a point of view – if so, what?
Imagine a radio station serving your community – Define
Promote/represent localism.
Responsibility to have a POV – needs to be representative of cross-section of
community.
Dialogue/discussion/conversation. “Be the bridge” that connects.
I like music shows/local news/Jim Hightower Commentary/Democracy Now
Other suggestions; Presence @ local events; continue with the BBC, Native American
programming; More variety of music
Partnerships: Arts council, k-12 schools/colleges – resource intensive.
Have cameo appearances/programming from public.
“Balance” is important –
Diversity brings more people to the table.
Cover/communicate issues on city/county councils.
Content/passion more important than production
Believe in & articulate your goals – resources will follow
To entertain is a priority.
Inform people to be good citizens
More community involvement – local arts/music events.
Licensed to city of Everett.
Reach out to schools, students – cover the quality of local education.
Locally produced programming vs. nationally syndicated
Have a heavy-duty volunteer campaign to bring in more volunteers
Don’t change anything – all the music/mix is perfect.
Sandy Thompson, Secretary, Board of Directors.
I cannot attend any of the
I cannot attend any of the meetings NOR participate via phone, because I'll be otherwise engaged (working, practicing my faith, or out of town) at those times. It's too bad we weren't invited to submit comments in writing--but here's (one of) mine, anyway: I think it is important for KSER to provide LOCALLY PRODUCED programming, whether music or public affairs. If we don't have enough of that, I think we should spend our hard-earned dollars recruiting more volunteers rather than paying for nationally syndicated programming that can be heard on NPR. If I want to listen to NPR, I'll listen to NPR, eh?
Where are we (you) headed
Hello,
I do not listen to KSER as much as I used to. Why? When John "the Hawk" Hawkenberry and Adora "your dopey" took over the morning on KSER that was enough for me. If you listen closely its the same old corporate drivel that started up when Bush and his buddies took over Public Radio. It only took a week of listening to figure out that the "Take Away" was just that the take away. John H. is not what I would call a humanist, and he is all for war if you listen real closely. And Adora is just in full agreement. Personally I think Ed's program was much more down to earth with the realities of our time. The take away comes off to me as a cover up to bury what really matters to humans that care. When do they talk about the realities of innocent women, children, and men suffering and dieing so we can continue to be the number one enemy of the world. No its all about low level stuff like sports, Santa Clause and all the other stuff that is wrong with the way things have been done up in this country. I get more real news listening to Cheech One Road speak in between his American Indian music, then I get from John the Hawk and Adora your dopey. (I agree name calling is low, but with these 2 corporate phonies I can't help it.) Give the station back "to people," not the people that are unwilling to make big changes and cover up for all these poor Wall street thieves. Give the show back to Ed. If you make some changes to the better I would give money again to the effort, but with shows like the "Take Away" I cannot support it. To me going from Amy Goodmann to John and Adora is like going from Jimmy Carter to George W Bush/Hitler. No thanks. This is my honest opinion, don't let 2 rotten eggs spoil the civility of your effort. Yes and I did get your letter yesterday to try to get me back into the flock, but you have some feather pulling to do. Other wise I love you people. You don't have to sound like a mature semi commercial radio station to have maturity that is going to be a real help for people, you know real human beings, the kind with flesh and blood. Don't get caught in the same leg trap NPR is, you end up becoming the same animal. That goofy doctor that you have on that laughs at his own jokes a lot is about as holistic as the Dow Chemical company (Doctor Zorba). The "Doctors are In" is fine though, it is local and informative. I will say this, the majority of your programming is good to excellent but you have a few things that are way off course and only inspire selfish people. We need inspired selfless folks. I listen to the birds in the morning after Amy Goodman goes off the air, much more being said through bills then mouths after her show. Please read this the next time youhave one of your on air planning sessions.
Kind Regards,
Steve
One point of view
I've been a listener since the Jack Straw days and volunteer from time to time. Overall I love the station but I'm finding I'm listening less and less as the talk seems to go on forever. I'm seeing more and more of what I come to the station for, the music programing, shrink and hours and hours of non stop talk its place. Break it up. Spread it out. Get the music back in drive time. I find I use CD's more and more at these times as I can only take so much.
Thank you.
New Vision
It ain't broke, don't fix it. Long time listener.
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