#008 Sonja Williams, Award-winning Radio Storyteller
Sonja Williams has always loved music and that led her to award-winning public radio shows. She now is a professor in the Department of Media, Journalism, and Film at Howard University and just penned her first book.
She has amassed an amazing body of work in broadcast and print since receiving her master’s degree in Communication from at Ohio University.
During her career Williams has received three prestigious George Foster Peabody Awards for Significant and Meritorious Achievement for groundbreaking music programming and audio documentaries for National Public Radio, Public Radio International and the Smithsonian Institution.
She created a 26 part audio documentary called Wade in the Water: African American Sacred Music Traditions, Black Radio: Telling It Like it Was and NPR’s Making the Music with Wynton Marsalis.
Williams talks with Spectrum's Tom Hodson about her early days in radio and how she was able to marry her love for music with her passion for audio storytelling.
Williams has now turned her career to print.
She discusses her new book, Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio and Freedom, just published in 2015 by the University of Illinois Press. It is a biography about a “gifted broadcast dramatist, journalist and activist” – who lived from 1917 to 1984.
He wrote radio dramas in the 1940’s and had a radio series called Destination Freedom.
In addition to his radio work, he was an investigative reporter for the Chicago Defender, wrote television shows and ghost-wrote Muhammad Ali’s book The Greatest.
Durham was posthumously induced into the National Radio Hall of Fame in his hometown of Chicago.
Williams discusses, in depth, the book and her legendary career in public broadcasting.
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