BOB EDWARDS’ HOUR-LONG CONVERSATION WITH AL YOUNG | Friday 18 January 2008

Bob talks to roving writer Tom Miller about his recent return to Cuba. Miller has made a trip there annually for the past 20 years and reports that the Cuban people have been pleasantly surprised since Raul Castro took over for his ailing brother Fidel. Then, we hear from Al Young, California’s Poet Laureate and the author of Something About the Blues. Young writes poetry with a blues sensibility and has traveled the world as a cultural ambassador for the US. He shares his thoughts on life, love, poetry and the blues.
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The Bob Edwards Show airs on XMPR 133
MF-8-9 AM ET
Encore Presentations M-F 8-10 AM, M-F 10-11 AM, M-F 8-9 PM
Saturday 8-9 AM (A replay of Friday’s show)
Bob Edwards is the host of “The Bob Edwards Show” on XM Satellite Radio and “Bob Edwards Weekend,” distributed to public radio stations by Public Radio International (PRI). Both programs feature in-depth interviews with newsmakers, journalists, entertainers and other compelling figures.
Before joining XM in 2004, Edwards hosted National Public Radio’s (NPR) “Morning Edition” for 24-and-a-half years, attracting more than 13 million listeners weekly. He joined NPR in 1974 and was co-host of NPR’s evening news magazine, “All Things Considered,” until 1979 when he helped launch “Morning Edition.”
Edwards was born in Louisville, Kentucky and began his radio career there.
Following service as a broadcaster in the U.S. Army, Edwards moved to Washington, D.C., where he worked as an anchorman for WTOP-AM, an all-news CBS affiliate. At age 25, he became a correspondent with the Mutual Broadcasting System. He is a graduate of the University of Louisville and holds a master’s degree from American University in Washington.
He is the author of two books: “Fridays with Red,” which chronicled his radio friendship with legendary sportscaster Red Barber, and “Edward R. Murrow and the Birth of Broadcast Journalism.”
Bob Edwards has won the duPont-Columbia Award for radio journalism, a George Foster Peabody Award for excellence in broadcasting, and the Edward R. Murrow Award for outstanding contributions to public radio. He serves as national first vice president of AFTRA, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. In November of 2004, Edwards was inducted into the national Radio Hall of Fame.
