The Prison Show

The Prison Show is a news program and radio call-in show created by Ray Hill to serve prison inmates and formerly incarcerated persons. It reaches approximately one-sixth of inmates in Texas,[1] and in 2012 reached 14 of the 111 prisons in the state.[2]

The Prison Show
GenrePhone-in (radio), current affairs
Running time120 minutes (Fridays)
Country of originUnited States
Language(s)English
Home stationKPFT
Hosted byRay Hill (activist) (founder)
Recording studioTexas
Original release1980 (1980) – present
Websitekpft.org/programming/newstalk/prison-show/

History

The Prison Show was started on KPFT by Ray Hill in 1980, while Hill was General Manager of the Pacifica-run station.[3] He hosted the show for its first 20 years.[3] Hill began The Prison Show after realizing that it was not possible for inmates to make phone calls from prison. One of the founder's main goals, as a formerly incarcerated person himself, was to increase support systems for inmates.[4] The show is completely volunteer run.[1] Ray Hill was a driving force behind the installation of phones for inmate use in Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) retired from the program, finally, in 2013 and since that time it has been Hosted by Hank Lamb and various co-hosts from time to time. Ray remained a trusted advisor and mentor for the show's leadership, until his death November 24th, 2018.

The show continues to share pertinent news, success stories, interviews, important cases and issues, and to provide a platform for families and friends of inmates in the Texas department of Criminal Justice to call in and have their "shout-outs" broadcast over the 90.1 FM KPFT, Houston airwaves, so that inmates in their broadcast range can hear their loved ones, for themselves. The idea being to maintain as much family and community contact as possible, to assist inmates upon their return to society and make their time incarcerated more In addition, the TDCJ Inmate 'grape vine' can carry messages to units beyond it's broadcast range and the program has callers from around the world weekly, as well as letters from across the nation.

Producer, David Collingsworth and Host, Hank Lamb, along with a team of dedicated volunteers, carry out the work started by Ray Hill and work endlessly to bring better healthcare, treatment and conditions for inmates and an end to the Death Penalty in Texas. Each week they have a steady rotation of guests who work towards those ends. Ray Hill approved and supported their work right up until his death.

Programming

The Prison Show features conversation about the TDCJ and other prison system issues, the justice system, Death Penalty, poor medical care, abusive summer heat conditions and other conditions for inmates, as well as court, junk science and evidence abuses and bail issues.[5] Guests have included advocacy groups, attorneys, persons who work in the criminal justice system, substance abuse counselors, success stories of former inmates and more.[6] Music segments include live performances by formerly incarcerated persons.[4] The show also includes a call-in hour that allows family members to speak on air to incarcerated loved ones.[7] This serves the station's main goal: connecting incarcerated persons with friends and family outside prison.[8] Many proxy weddings are also performed on the show.[1][2] Formerly incarcerated persons speak of the deep impact of being able to listen to the show while in prison.[7] The show also works towards changing popular perception of prisons and incarceration.[9]

The show traditionally started with Ray Hill saying, "Holler down the pipe, chase and rattle them bars, ’cause we’re gonna do a Prison Show.”[6][8]

After Hill stepped down from 30 years of hosting the show, the hosting role was taken over by a few others, including Anthony Graves and Kathy Griffin, who departed shortly, and the role was assumed by Hank Lamb, at the request of Ray Hill, who also requested David Collingsworth take on the role of Producer.[10]

Advocacy

Advocacy work by The Prison Show was instrumental in changing Texas's policy on installing prison payphones. Texas was the last state to provide a way for inmates to make phone calls; it allowed this to happen in 2007.[11][12] The show has also provided an opportunity to draw awareness to issues around medical care within prisons, or lack of basic necessities like air conditioning.[2]

gollark: Not particularly.
gollark: One of these words is PROBABLY right.
gollark: And?
gollark: Waaaait, what if the bidder name actually matters? I wouldn't put it past Him.
gollark: I *will* buy that obelisk.

See also

References

  1. Heinrich, Holly (2012-03-15). "'The Prison Show' Connects Texas Inmates on the Radio". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  2. "'The Prison Show' Helps Texas Inmates Find Escape". NPR.org. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  3. "Remembering KPFT's Ray Hill, Pioneering "Prison Show" Host and LGBT Activist in Houston". Democracy Now!. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  4. "Houston Radio Show Connects Texas Inmates to Life Beyond Prison". NationSwell. 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  5. Show, The Prison. "The Prison Show Online Radio by The Prison Show". BlogTalkRadio. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  6. "Jailhouse Talk". Mother Jones. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  7. Word, Shiver the (2016-06-29). "Activist and Ex-Con Founder Of The Prison Show Talks Doing Time, Crime, and The Art of Radio". christopherflakus. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  8. "The Texas Prison Show: Incarcerated Discourse and Revolutionary Activism". HMB. 2008-11-07. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  9. Robinson, Jack (2012-06-06). "What To Expect When You Are An Inmate In A Texas Prison". Jack Robinson. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  10. Holley, Joe (2012-08-18). "KPFT's 'Prison Show' gets 'perfect' new host". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  11. "Art at Noon | Ray Hill and David Collingsworth of KPFT's The Prison Show". Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  12. Smith, Harrison (2 December 2018). "Ray Hill, 'citizen provocateur' who fought for gay rights and prison reform, dies at 78". Washington Post. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
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