Culture

NPR’s Storycorps Visits Tampa Bay To Preserve Local Stories

WUSF Public Media will host StoryCorps to record the stories of local residents through both in-person and virtual interviews and preserve them in the Library of Congress. Photo from WUSF.

StoryCorps, the national nonprofit organization dedicated to recording, preserving, and sharing the stories of people from all backgrounds and beliefs, comes to Tampa January 5, to February 14 to record interviews, in-person and virtually, as part of its Mobile Tour.

Now in its 17th year, the StoryCorps Mobile Tour has facilitated thousands of meaningful conversations between people who know and care about one another. StoryCorps is committed to creating a safe recording environment and has introduced several measures to its recording process in Tampa, where participants have the option of recording in-person or via StoryCorps’ Virtual Recording Booth, a video-conferencing platform that can be accessed remotely using an internet-connected device. Participants can learn more about safety precautions for in-person recording at storycorps.org.

Reservations to record can be made by calling StoryCorps’ 24-hour toll-free reservation line at 1-800-850-4406 or visiting storycorps.org.

Founded in 2003 by award-winning documentary producer and MacArthur Fellow Dave Isay, StoryCorps has traveled to every corner of the country to record interviews in the organization’s effort to create a world where we listen closely to each other and recognize the beauty, grace and poetry in the lives and stories we find all around us.

“StoryCorps tells an authentic American story—that we are a people defined by small acts of courage, kindness, and heroism. Each interview reminds people that their lives matter and will not be forgotten,” said Isay. “During this pandemic, the value of preserving these stories, and of strengthening connections between people who may feel physically isolated, is more important than ever.”

In Tampa, StoryCorps will partner with NPR affiliate WUSF Public Media. WUSF will air a selection of the local interviews and create special programs around the project. StoryCorps may also share excerpts of these stories with the world through the project’s popular weekly NPR broadcasts, animated shorts, digital platforms, and best-selling books.

“Our region is full of incredible stories, and each story begins with one person,” said WUSF General Manager JoAnn Urofsky. “With StoryCorps, we continue our mission to be where our audience is and engage people in the community wherever we can. As a public media organization, we are eager to be part of our listener’s lives – and with this project we can help provide that community gathering place and bring people’s stories to each other.”

StoryCorps is made possible in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American people.

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