Keep Me In Your Heart

- Posted in Personal by

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Music bed

Welcome to another turn of The Sonic Wheel

I’m Christopher Howell

Music bed down

At the time my late wife, Charlotte and I met in 1989 I was struggling to find a path in the world. Charlotte was kind and smart and beautiful and I thought she might help steady me and help me get headed in the right direction.

When you're first dating someone you learn a lot about them. You learn about their family, their friends, their job and the kind of music they like. Charlotte was six years younger then me and liked a lot of punk and new wave from the late 70 and early 80s. My musical tastes skewed older. There was a lot of overlap in what we both enjoyed, especially The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Kinks, and The Small Faces.

We both liked singer-songwriter Warren Zevon. I was really happy to find out she liked him. Warren Zevon’s biggest hit was 1978’s quirky “Werewolves of London”.  Some people dislike his songs because of his sometimes dark and strange lyrics but Charlotte and I instantly bonded over our love for his music. We have 5 CDs of his studio recordings and two anthology box sets. Maybe not everything he recorded but a lot.

Throughout the 1990s Zevon appeared numerous times on David Letterman’s show, even sitting in as bandleader once when Paul Shaffer was away on a movie shoot. Every time Zevon was on, we were sure to tune in.

On November 8, 2025 Letterman inducted Zevon into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

[cut from Letterman Hall of Fame induction]

That was from David Letterman’s speech inducting Warren Zevon in to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

In August 2002 Zevon was diagnosed with pleural mesothelioma, an inoperable form of lung cancer. Charlotte and I were watching Letterman on October 30, 2002 when Zevon talked about his cancer diagnosis in an emotional and poignant last appearance. He said, “I might have made a tactical error in not going to a physician for 20 years. It was one of those phobias that really didn’t pay off.”  Zevon said after getting a terminal cancer diagnosis he put more value on the small pleasures of life. He uttered what has become a legendary statement.

[Cut from Late Night – sandwich]

That was from Warren Zevon’s last appearance on David Letterman’s Late Show in 2002.

Charlotte didn't have a phobia of doctors. She just didn’t like going to the doctor. I don’t know why. She would go to the doctor when she absolutely needed to but would avoid it if she could. It was a painful and repulsive coincidence that both Warren Zevon and Charlotte would both learn too late they were dying of cancer.

Upon learning of his cancer diagnosis, Zevon became determined to record a final album. He recorded The Wind, with guest stars Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Don Henley, Ry Cooder, Dwight Yoakam, Jackson Browne, Emmylou Harris, Joe Walsh and many others. The album was released on August 26, 2003, just two weeks before his death.

The Wind won a 2004 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album and a Grammy for Best Rock Vocal Performance for the song  "Disorder In The House".

The song "Keep Me In Your Heart" from the album was the last song Zevon recorded and was nominated for song of the year.

[a few seconds of Keep Me in Your Heart]

Keep Me In Your Heart was the only song Charlotte specifically requested to be played at her funeral.

I’m keeping both Charlotte and Warren Zevon in my heart today and everyday. 

Music bed up

That’s it for this spin of The Sonic Wheel

Thanks for listening.

I’m Christopher Howell

Music bed down


Credits

Intro/outro music by Radio Direct

Logo by Snehanshu Dharmadhikari on Unsplash

David Letterman Inducts Warren Zevon into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame | Rock Hall 2025 Induction - https://youtu.be/CYYzqt68dnE?si=uZp2bMw_P5e9jBKv

Warren Zevon's Final "Late Show" Appearance | Letterman - https://youtu.be/giTi8KWSZl4?si=UaUnVQ9huWX7AwSt

Clip of the song Keep Me In Your Heart For a While, Written by Warren Zevon and Jorge Calderon. Copyright Zevon Music (BMI) 2003 from the album The Wind.

Header photo from AZ Quotes, https://www.azquotes.com/quote/324800

Fundraising PSYOPS

- Posted in Radio by

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Music bed

Welcome to another turn of The Sonic Wheel

I’m Christopher Howell

Music bed down

After working as a part-time board operator for a number of years, I was hired as a full-time producer of fundraising spots and to help produce the on-air fundraising campaigns for public radio station 90.7 WMFE-FM in Orlando. I would produce 30 or 60 second audio spots to air during or outside of fundraising time to convince listeners to become subscribing members of the station. I was actually one of the first full-time, dedicated, public radio fundraising producers in the nation.

Let’s take a walk down memory lane and listen to some of my best productions from that era. At the time, 90.7 was a news and classical music combo. Monday through Friday we aired NPR’s Morning Edition from 6am to 9am. Locally hosted classical music from 9am to 4 pm. Then All Things Considered and Marketplace from 4 to 7. At 7pm there was recorded classical music all night until the next morning.

Here’s a short spot that aired around news programming in the two weeks or so leading up to the fund drive. The aim of the spot was to thank listeners and to plant a seed to get them ready to give when the drive began.

insert softening 07.wav audio here

That was a fundraising spot I produced for 90.7 WMFE.

If you’re a NPR listener, during the middle part of the day, you’ll hear Lakshmi Singh present the top of the hour national newscasts. In the late 1990s Lakshmi was a reporter for 90.7. We recorded a number of spots for a very early morning BBC News show called “World Update”. Here’s an example of a pre-recorded fundraising spot that aired during World Update before staff could come in and start pitching live.

insert singh-howell world update pitch 02.wav audio here

That was a fundraising spot I produced from the BBC news program “World Update”. Lakshmi Singh has the purest announcer’s voice I’ve ever heard. It’s like listening to a violin.

I reviewed a number of the spots I produced for this episode. I was amazed at the sheer volume of audio I produced from 1995 to 1998. There must be more then 100 fundraising spots. Thank you gift spots for mugs, tee shirts, unbrellas, weekend getaways and the public radio staple – the tote bag.

Over the years I was involved in pledge drives that brought in hundreds of thousands of dollars. It wasn’t often we didn’t meet or exceed our goals. That success was a team effort. I worked with a group of incredible people who were dedicated to the mission of public broadcasting. To be a trusted member of the community. To be fair, accurate, entertaining and transparent. To provide unique programming not found on commercial outlets.

It was so much fun. I’m proud of all the work I’ve done for public radio.

Music bed up

That’s it for this spin of The Sonic Wheel

Thanks for listening

I’m Christopher Howell

Music bed down


Credits

Music by Radio Direct

Logo by Snehanshu Dharmadhikari on Unsplash

Header photo by Chris!

Journalism Code of Ethics

- Posted in Journalism by

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Music bed

Welcome to another turn of The Sonic Wheel

I’m Christopher Howell

Music bed down

An October 2025 poll by Gallop found that confidence in the mass media is historically low. Only 28 percent of Americans have a great deal or fair amount of confidence in newspapers, radio or TV to report the news fully, accurately or fairly. Republicans polled had much lower confidence in media then democrats and younger people were less trusting then older people. A Pew Research Center survey from last October had similar findings.

There’s a lot reasons for this. The internet has become an outrage machine where the biggest untruth is shared widely while any correction comes too late and gets buried in the weeds. Unscrupulous people and groups now claim they’re journalists. Politicians, while never truly trustworthy, tell the most outrageous and easily provable lies with impunity. AI let’s anyone with no technical skill spin up a fiction complete with supporting and convincing photographs. The prime motivation of for-profit news outlets is to no longer serve their audiences with trustworthy news. And maybe people today are just more partisan and more skeptical. Misinformation and disinformation is everywhere.

Trust is a the coin of the realm to an ethical media organization. Every good newspaper, TV newsroom, radio news station and now podcast or internet news outlet has a code of ethics that is strictly enforced. Strictly enforced. The Society of Professional Journalists (or SPJ) has a code of ethics that is followed by many news organizations or it’s used as a template to form custom ethics codes to serve an outlet’s specific needs.

I’ve read a number of ethics codes but I’m really fond of this list of five core principals of ethical journalism from the Ethical Journalism Network based in England. Here’s Honorary President and former Director Aidan White --

(Cut from Aidan White)

That was Honorary President of the Ethical Journalism Network Aidan White.

Journalists and the profession of journalism have taken a beating in the last 10 years -- or longer. According to a February 2026 report by the Committee to Protect Journalists 129 members of the press were killed in 2025. That’s a record -- more then in any other year of the past 30 years data has been collected. Israel was responsible for two-thirds of all press killings in both 2025 and 2024, many of those were targeted killings. Journalists are routinely killed for simply trying to gather facts and report what they’ve found. In 2023 two journalists were killed in the United States while on the job.

I just watched a 2003 movie called Shattered Glass about journalist Stephen Glass and his scandal at the magazine “The New Republic”. Forbes started questioning the facts of some of Glass’s articles. It turns out he had completely or partially fabricated 27 out of 41 published stories. Glass was fired and never worked in journalism again. In fact, he attended law school, passed the bar but was not granted a law license because of his fabricated stories. I point this out to demonstrate how seriously good news outlets take ethics and to make you think about politicians and other professions with no such codes.

There’s a difference between journalism and news outlets. I’ve come to see for-profit news outlets like the New York Times and most network TV news as mostly serving their shareholders and not you. The Washington Post and CBS, both owned by a billionaires, appear to be serving the oligarch class and not you. Facebook, owned by another billionaire, is a horrible place to find your news. Think of the motivations behind each news outlet. Be vigilant for fabricated news and click bait. Look out for AI generated news. Look out for people with an axe to grind. Be a smart, skeptical news consumer.

I don’t know how to restore the public’s trust in mass media. Many outlets don’t deserve to be trusted. NPR and ProPublica rank high on my personal list because they’re non-profit. When you remove the profit motive there’s greater trust.

Journalists get things wrong. Journalists aren’t perfect. Doctors and engineers and other professionals also make mistakes. But unlike many professions, good journalists are trying to be fair and thorough and accurate. I’m tired of hearing people who have zero knowledge about the profession of journalism making wild claims and accusations with no proof. Seriously, screw those people.

Be aware that good journalists are operating by an enforceable code of ethics and bad journalists do not. I urge you to go read the SPJ Code of Ethics and think about the news you see, read and listen to.

I’m including links to the reports and Aiden White that I’ve referenced in the transcript of today’s episode on my website at sonicwheel.wordpress.com.

Music bed up

That’s it for this spin of The Sonic Wheel

I’m Christopher Howell

Music bed down

Links referenced in today's episode

https://news.gallup.com/poll/695762/trust-media-new-low.aspx

https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/10/29/how-americans-trust-in-information-from-news-organizations-and-social-media-sites-has-changed-over-time/

https://www.spj.org/spj-code-of-ethics/

https://ethicaljournalismnetwork.org/

https://youtu.be/uNidQHk5SZs

https://cpj.org/special-reports/record-129-press-members-killed-in-2025-israel-responsible-for-2-of-3-of-deaths/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shattered_Glass_(film)


Credits:

Ethics word cloud by Teodoraturovic: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International

Music by Radio Direct

Logo by Snehanshu Dharmadhikari on Unsplash