Day to Day

Day to Day (D2D) was a one-hour weekday American radio newsmagazine distributed by National Public Radio (NPR), and produced by NPR in collaboration with Slate. Madeleine Brand served as host from 2006. Topics regularly covered by D2D included news, entertainment, politics and the arts; contributors included familiar NPR personalities, reporters from NPR member stations, writers for Slate, and reporters from Marketplace, a show produced by American Public Media. D2D premiered on Monday, July 28, 2003, and fed to stations from noon ET with updates through 4:00 p.m. ET. It was the fastest growing program in NPR's history.[1]

Day to Day
GenreNews: analysis, commentary, features, interviews, specials
Running timeca. 50 minutes
Country of originUnited States
Language(s)English
SyndicatesNational Public Radio
Hosted byMadeleine Brand
Directed byKathryn Fox, Shereen Meraji, Andy Houlihan, Ki Sung
Produced bySteve Proffitt
Chip Grabow
Neal Carruth
Sarah Spivack
Martina Castro
Kenya Young
Executive producer(s)Deborah Clark
Recording studioNPR West
Culver City, California
Original releaseJuly 2003 – March 20, 2009
Audio formatStereophonic
Websitenpr.org/programs/day
PodcastPodcast / RSS feed

On December 10, 2008, NPR announced Day to Day would be canceled with its final episode to be broadcast on March 20, 2009.[2] According to NPR as of December 2008 Day to Day was airing on 186 stations and attracting a weekly cumulative audience of 1.8 million listeners.[3]

According to Dennis Haarsager, NPR's acting CEO, D2D was not "attracting sufficient levels of audience or national underwriting necessary to sustain continued production" now that NPR's projected budget deficit for the 2009 fiscal year grew from $2 million in July, to $23 million in December.[4]

The final data released after March 2008 showed that the program had a weekly cumulative audience of 2,036,400, placing it third nationally behind only Talk of the Nation and Fresh Air for all midday public radio programming.[5]

Background

Day to Day began as a co-production with the then-Microsoft-owned Slate that was "targeted for midday broadcast" and designed to "showcase newsworthy topics with a smart, savvy and spontaneous approach" with a "diverse family of contributors from both NPR News and Slate"; it was the "first program collaboration NPR has initiated with a commercial media outlet in its 33-year history."[6] The partnership was criticized in the Online Journalism Review for "possible conflicts on Microsoft coverage (or lack thereof)" and the "cross-media advertisements and underwriting" plans.[7]

Day to Day debuted on public radio stations in July 2003.[6] and was the first NPR newsmagazine produced at NPR West studios in Culver City, California, near Los Angeles.[8]

Format

While Day to Day was divided into segments similar in length to those on Morning Edition and All Things Considered, there were at least two major differences: the C segment was divided into two sections; and the program had a shorter total running time—one hour compared to two for the larger newsmagazines.

Day to Day began with a sixty-second billboard, wherein Alex Chadwick and Madeleine Brand talk about what will be coming up on the show. The billboard is followed by the standard NPR newscast from one minute past to six minutes past the hour. Some stations utilized the last 2.5 minutes of the newscast to deliver local midday news reports. A thirty-second music bed follows, and then Segment A begins.

Segment A (duration 12:29) contained the top story of the day, and usually synopses of longer-term issues viewed through the lens of current events. Segment topics ranged from the American judicial system to economics to geopolitics to conversations with notable newsmakers, and more. Segment A closed at nineteen minutes past the hour and leads into a two-minute station break.

At twenty-one after, Segment B (duration 7:49) began. Segment B composed the remainder of the first half-hour, and as such continued coverage on important news events of the day, or segued into lighter culturally or socially relevant stories. Segment B closes at 28:50 past the hour, and goes into a local break until the bottom of the hour.

At half past the hour, Day to Day returned with Segment C1 (duration 5:14), usually reserved for updates on stories presented in the first half-hour, or different angles on major news stories. Segment C2 (duration 3:59) was home to the Marketplace report, a discussion about an item of business news with a reporter from Marketplace, capped with a short preview of that evening's program. C2 ended at 39:30 after the hour.

Following another thirty-second music break, Day to Day entered Segment D (duration 8:59). There was little specificity to the content of Segment D; stories ranged from international and domestic issues to long-term reports on a variety of topics. Segment D ran from forty minutes to forty-nine minutes past the hour, and another two-minute station break ensued.

Segment E (duration 8:20) began at fifty-one minutes past the hour. For the show's first three years, it was divided into Segments E1 and E2, which lasted roughly three and a half minutes each. On February 20, 2007, Day to Day combined the two E segments into one long one. Segment E was usually devoted to commentary and light features, including "The Unger Report", a satirical take on news and current events. Time permitting, Segment E was followed up by the credits, and Day to Day came to a close.

Personnel

Hosts

For its first two and a half years, Day to Day was usually hosted by either longtime NPR host and correspondent Alex Chadwick or NPR news host Madeleine Brand. On January 16, 2006, Chadwick and Brand began co-hosting each program.[9]

On Friday, November 7, 2008, Chadwick anchored his final broadcast on the show. Brand continued to anchor the remainder of Day to Day's run, along with rotating co-hosts.

NPR personalities Noah Adams, Alex Cohen and Mike Pesca often served as substitute hosts for the program.

gollark: It'd just spread less, probably.
gollark: Viruses don't do long-term planning or indeed any, so a deadlier variant *could* happen.
gollark: Wide deployment, I mean.
gollark: These things always take a while to actually be usable. I expect it's a year out.
gollark: The "other ones lasted longer than a year so the estimates are too optimistic" thing ignores the fact that we can develop vaccines now.

See also

References

  1. "Quick! Find a voice! And be funny about it!" (Press release). Current.org. 28 December 2008. Archived from the original on 2012-06-09. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
  2. "NPR Announces Cuts to Staff, Programs" (Press release). National Public Radio. 10 December 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  3. "NPR layoffs top system's damage report" (Press release). Current.org. 22 March 2004. Archived from the original on 2012-06-09. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
  4. Steve Proffitt. NPR: RIP D2D. 10 December 2008. Accessed 10 December 2008. National Public Radio.
  5. "Filling midday vacancies" (Press release). Current.org. 13 April 2009. Archived from the original on 2012-06-09. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
  6. "NPR and Slate Magazine to Produce Weekday Radio Program Day to Day Premieres in July 2003". National Public Radio. 12 May 2003. Retrieved 2008-12-11.
  7. Slate, NPR Partnership Could Be More Big Media Than Public Radio, a June 3, 2003 article by Mark Glaser from Online Journalism Review
  8. "NPR Establishes Major Production Center in California NPR West Opens November 2, Expanding Network's Presence and Reach" (Press release). National Public Radio. 16 October 2002. Retrieved 2007-09-17.
  9. Luke Burbank (20 January 2006). The Growing Popularity of Laughter Therapy (.MP3) (Audio). Day to Day, NPR. Event occurs at 00:04:06. Retrieved 2007-09-17.
  10. Brian Unger's "Unger Report" from the NPR website
  11. Michelle Singletary's "Color of Money" financial segments from the NPR website
  12. Xeni Jardin's "Xeni Tech" from the NPR website
  13. Scott Carrier's "Building Young Assassins In Juarez" from the NPR website
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.