Happy Birthday, WCSP!
On a late walk yesterday I learned it was the 20th anniversary of C-SPAN radio. It began on October 9, 1997, and one of the first interviews aired was with Rep. Jay Johnson (D-Wisc.), who, in addition to representing Wisconsin in the U.S. House of Representatives was also a former disc jockey.
The first time I remember hearing C-SPAN radio was in the car taking Suzanne to a ballet recital at Children's Hospital in D.C. It was December, 1998, the Clinton impeachment hearings, so the radio station had been on the air for more than a year already. But it was way down there on the left end of the dial (90.1, WCSP FM), and easy to miss if you were doing a quick scan.
What was notable about the timing was that Suzanne and the other members of the Center for Ballet Arts were performing scenes from the "Nutcracker" not just for the children in the hospital but also for then First Lady Hillary Clinton. I imagined what she must be feeling at the time, what it took for her to show up anyway. Turns out, that was just the beginning.
Anyway ... driving past the Capitol on the way to the hospital that day gave me one of those "only in D.C." moments that I've never forgotten. But C-SPAN radio with its gavel-to-gavel coverage of the House and Senate makes you feel like you're always "only in D.C." — but in a good way.
I'm no policy wonk, but when you can slip in the ear buds of your 10-year-old iPod radio, tune to 90.1 and listen to the Sunday talk shows while you're walking ... well, no secret to why the radio station celebrates two decades (and the television station even more).
Happy Birthday, C-SPAN Radio. Wishing you many happy returns of the day!
(Photo: C-SPAN)
The first time I remember hearing C-SPAN radio was in the car taking Suzanne to a ballet recital at Children's Hospital in D.C. It was December, 1998, the Clinton impeachment hearings, so the radio station had been on the air for more than a year already. But it was way down there on the left end of the dial (90.1, WCSP FM), and easy to miss if you were doing a quick scan.
What was notable about the timing was that Suzanne and the other members of the Center for Ballet Arts were performing scenes from the "Nutcracker" not just for the children in the hospital but also for then First Lady Hillary Clinton. I imagined what she must be feeling at the time, what it took for her to show up anyway. Turns out, that was just the beginning.
Anyway ... driving past the Capitol on the way to the hospital that day gave me one of those "only in D.C." moments that I've never forgotten. But C-SPAN radio with its gavel-to-gavel coverage of the House and Senate makes you feel like you're always "only in D.C." — but in a good way.
I'm no policy wonk, but when you can slip in the ear buds of your 10-year-old iPod radio, tune to 90.1 and listen to the Sunday talk shows while you're walking ... well, no secret to why the radio station celebrates two decades (and the television station even more).
Happy Birthday, C-SPAN Radio. Wishing you many happy returns of the day!
(Photo: C-SPAN)
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