On Saturday, July 26, Amy Goodman, the host and co-founder of Democracy Now! will give a talk at the Katharine Cornell Theatre. Proceeds will benefit local radio station WVVY.
Amy Goodman has devoted her life to exposing the issues, stories and people ignored or overlooked in mainstream media. Despite the cynicism surrounding today’s news culture, she still believes that media can be the world’s greatest force for peace.
Ms. Goodman is the co-founder of Democracy Now!, the nation’s largest and fastest growing public media collaboration, which airs on more than 1,200 stations around the world.
“The media is the way that we learn about the world and the way the rest of the world learns about us,” she said in an interview with the Gazette. “So it should be through an independent lens.”
On Saturday, July 26, Ms. Goodman will give a talk at the Katharine Cornell Theatre in Vineyard Haven about the role of independent media in today’s world. Proceeds will benefit local radio station WVVY, which is funded by listeners and local business sponsors, and broadcasts Democracy Now! every weekday at noon.
An informal gathering and auction at the Beach Plum Inn in Chilmark earlier in the evening will benefit Democracy Now! which is funded by listeners, viewers and foundations.
Throughout her career, Ms. Goodman has been a fierce supporter of independent media. Her long list of awards includes the Gandhi Peace Award in 2012 and the Right Livelihood Award (often called the alternative Nobel Prize) in 2008.
“I deeply believe that media can be the greatest force for peace on earth, because it increases our way of communicating with each other,” she said. “Instead, all too often, it’s wielded as a weapon of war, and I think independent media is what can save us.”
She pointed out that the hundreds of television channels available today are owned by just a handful of corporations. While news stations seem to be competing with each other, she said, they are often informed by “the same small group of pundits who know so little about so much, explaining the world to us and getting it so wrong.”
“We need to open up the media to reflect the voices of people all over this country and around the world,” she added.
That mission has not been easy. For example, when the progressive leaning Pacifica Radio’s KPFT station in Houston went on the air in 1970, its transmitter was blown up by the Ku Klux Klan. That same year, after the transmitter was rebuilt, the Klan struck again, this time crippling the station for several months.
Ms. Goodman recalled that Jimmy Hutto, who was convicted of the bombings, had said it was the best thing he had ever done. She pointed to the incident as revealing of both the threat and the power of independent media.
“It allows people to speak for themselves,” she said. “And when you hear a Palestinian child, an Israeli grandmother, an uncle in Iraq or an aunt in Afghanistan tell their story, you might say it sounds like my family member... You don’t have to agree, but you begin to understand where they are coming from. That’s the power of the media. That’s the beginning of peace.”
Ms. Goodman’s talk on Saturday will include topics from her most recent book, The Silenced Majority: Stories of Uprisings, Occupations, Resistance and Hope, a collection of syndicated columns that Ms. Goodman co-wrote with colleague Denis Moynihan. Copies will be available on Saturday and a book signing will follow Ms. Goodman’s talk.
The people around the world who are concerned about war and peace, climate change, government abuses of power and other critical issues, Ms. Goodman said, “are not a fringe minority, not even a silent majority, but the silenced majority; silenced by the corporate media, which is why we have to take the media back.”
She said the biggest challenge facing independent media today is the fight for an open, free internet. Although the internet was created with public resources, “corporations see it as an incredible gold mine, and it’s very important that it not be privatized,” she said.
The success of Democracy Now! hinges largely on its availability in many formats. Millions of people around the world access the show on their radios, televisions, computers and cell phones, and transcripts are available online. The 15-minute War and Peace Report that opens each broadcast is also translated into Spanish.
“We often get calls from the major networks for sources on stories, or guests we’ve had that they want to have,” Ms. Goodman said. “Our motto is, ‘Steal this story please.’”
Ms. Goodman will be introduced on Saturday by Charlayne Hunter-Gault, a former correspondent for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service. Ms. Hunter-Gault’s memoir, In My Place, recalls her experiences as one of the first two African-Americans to attend the University of Georgia.
“I’m so honored that she is going to be doing that,” Ms. Goodman said. “She is an incredible role model and I have followed her work for decades, so I’m really excited about that, and really looking forward to seeing her there.”
Amy Goodman at the Katharine Cornell Theatre begins at 7 p.m. on Saturday, July 26. Tickets are $10. A pre-event reception begins at 5 p.m. at the Beach Plum Inn. Tickets are $75. Visit democracynow.org.

Comments
Can't wait to hear and meet
Paul Lazes Vineyard HavenCan't wait to hear and meet her
P.
great to have Amy here...a
Steve Edgartown,Ma.great to have Amy here...a very, positive show on WVVY m-f at noon...
I take it from this article
Chris Martha's Vineyard, MAI take it from this article that, in Ms. Goodman's mind, only "progressive" radio stations offer a non-ideologically influenced take on the news. Does that imply that PBS radio stations offer only non-stop news, not non-stop left-leaning editorials?
goodman is a shill for hamas.
steve west tisgoodman is a shill for hamas..she has no shame. bds democracy now!
Only on Martha's Vineyard
BFOnly on Martha's Vineyard could goodman's visit stir excitement.
I remember when....Poor, poor Martha!!
In my two and one-half
Chris Martha's Vineyard, MAIn my two and one-half decades as a full-time resident of Martha's Vineyard I have never ceased to be amazed at the insatiable craving of the population to attend the day after day and week after week Socialist presentations offered to the Summer and year-round residents of the Island. But then I stop and look around. The school system administrators act like Socialists. The State government functions as if it were Socialist, as does the Nation's government. Our Congressional delegation behaves like Socialists and the children of the illegal aliens in our state, and on our Island, say that the Constitution "is nothing but words on a piece of paper". Were it not for those "words on a piece of paper", the illegal aliens from around the world would not choose to flock here for the opportunities those words offer and protect. Why has Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts and the Nation chosen to forsake the words and ideals of our Founding Fathers to appease the lowest common denominator? We are better than that. Why don't we choose to live up to our potential rather than down to the level of our least demanding neighbors? Has the Island, State, and Nation simply chosen to surrender? I, for one, have not!
posted by Chris: "Has the
BFposted by Chris: "Has the Island, State, and Nation simply chosen to surrender? I, for one, have not"!
Nor have I Chris...Good to read your post....So few of us left on MV, and even fewer in the state overall. Very Sad?!!!
Looks like my earlier post did not get published ???
The island is, indeed, an odd
Bob OBThe island is, indeed, an odd place. I share your view that a lemming-like tendency to embrace all things left of center does exist. I disagree, however, that this reflects the tendencies of the state and the greater union. Things are very different outside the asylum walls. Amy Goodman would not be greeted with a group hug in most of the nation, and Democracy Now would not be portrayed as an independent voice in most journalistic circles. There is a reason that you see the visitors that you do - and a reason that the island receives the presidential visits that it has. Some viewpoints are less likely to withstand the scrutiny of opposing views. Pay no mind, and be of good cheer. The weather is fine and the stripers are running. Let them talk themselves hoarse while you enjoy the fruits of your labor - that's what infuriates them the most.
Thanks for the kind words, BF
Chris Martha's Vineyard, MAThanks for the kind words, BF and Bob! As for your comment, " . . . Democracy Now would not be portrayed as an independent voice in most journalistic circles . . .", you went where I dared not go. Where else in these United States would the death of the founder of Bodhi Path (picture included) get the same coverage as a visit to the Island from a mainstream Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate? I would dearly appreciate more even-handed coverage of events with a political or ideological bent from the Gazette, if only for journalistic and intellectual integrity.
I'm sorry, BF and Bob.
Chris Martha's Vineyard, MAI'm sorry, BF and Bob. Apparently my response to your posts was deleted because it was not politically correct.
I totally with Chris and BF
Jimmy - I ServedI totally with Chris and BF and what is quite upsetting to me is seeing our country be destroyed mainly from within, seeing all the sacrifices soldiers, Marines and their families that have gone before us seem to have been all for nothing and those who still serve and sacrifice are treated worst than all the illegals all while there is no public outrage especially from the socialists neighbors, our elected officials who are the great majority in this state, in our county and on this island! It is a disgrace and shameful!
"This is the first time in my adult life that I have been ashamed of my country".
Jimmy,
Chris Martha's Vineyard, MAJimmy,
I served during Vietnam and have been paying for it on this Island ever since I arrived. Since I was six my father taught me that law enforcement officers were my friends in the time of danger. Sad to say, I no longer have faith that they have my back. I have seen no evidence that that is the case. Did the country really do a 180 when I wasn't looking?
Chris
No. Simply, no. Loud shouting
TedNo. Simply, no. Loud shouting hippies are no more worthy of your attention now than they were then. Things change, but in great measure they stay the same. Political regimes come and go. It's the same country that you grew up in, and it will inevitably thrive. Why some that benefit from all that she has to offer choose to hate her, I will ever understand. But so it goes. In any event, welcome home.
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