Marco WermanMW

Marco Werman

I got my first job in journalism at 16 as a copy-boy at the News and Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina.  I've worked in documentary photography, print, radio and television.  My radio work started in Burkina Faso in West Africa, following a three year stint with the Peace Corps in Togo.  From Burkina Faso, I moved to London to produce the BBC World Service flagship breakfast program for Africa, "Network Africa."In 1990, I moved back to the US, and helped start up a new public radio station in upstate New York in the Adirondacks where I reported, produced and hosted a daily two-hour news and current affairs show.  Four years later, I moved to Rome, Italy where I was the correspondent for Monitor Radio.  In 1995, WGBH and The World hired me to help begin the program.  Its mission -- to bring international news to American ears in a compelling way that would make the world more relevant to them -- scratched me where I itch.  And I've been committed to that mission ever since.Along the way, I've won some awards (the National Federation of Community Broadcasters for an original radio drama I wrote; the Sony awards for an exposé on child labor in West African gold mines; the New York Festivals for a BBC documentary on the 1987 assassination of Burkina Faso’s president; the first annual Unity award from the Radio and Television News Director’s Association for coverage of diversity issues; and an Emmy for a Frontline documentary on Libya).  But the most important honor for me remains the emails I get from listeners thanking us for the coverage we give to often little-known stories and voices from around the globe.
Nigerians inducted into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
2:25
Music from the ruins in Iran
1:39
The last living member of Ladysmith Black Mambazo has died
2:15
Japanese Baby Boomer Masayoshi Takanaka is all the rage
1:47
10 years since The Rolling Stones rocked Cuba
2:21
A symphonic work for ‘lost birds’
1:29
A new appreciation for a late Icelandic composer
2:32
Welsh harpist records ‘Note to Self’
1:50
The soundtrack to Brazilian dictatorship
1:26
Counting the dead and those who fled Ukraine
1:54
Legendary trombonist and composer Willie Colón dies
1:15
Acting was just one of Robert Duvall’s many passions
2:10
New law in Brazil brings people and pets together in the afterlife
1:19
Top Ghanaian musician Ebo Taylor dies over the weekend
1:07
Legendary Brazilian duo score major Grammy win
2:04
Remembering Jamaican musician Sly Dunbar
1:53
A Portuguese trumpeter fusing jazz and deep house
1:49
A debut album for a formerly private songwriter
1:56
A soccer fan in Morocco gets a moment in the spotlight
2:40
Dancing through 30 years of The World’s global hits
9:58
Remembering a legendary Brazilian musician and composer
8:13
The enduring legacy of Colombian musician Lisandro Meza
2:41
Daddy Lumba, Ghanaian musician
0:54
Aurelio Martinez, Garifuna musician
1:24
Ziad Rahbani, Lebanese musician
0:50
A musical message of hope from Mali’s Rokia Koné
1:23
Classical music is not dead — it’s alive in Iceland
0:52
Font choice is political — and not just for the US State Department
4:30
The sounds of (not) silence
2:31
Reggae legend Jimmy Cliff dies at 81
1:49
Dance Dance Revolution’s world record holder
1:29
Mali’s blind duo Amadou and Mariam
2:17
‘It did work’: The anti-apartheid album that changed history
11:40
Teen booking agent produced world famous jazz concert; new film reveals how
11:18
Remembering a legendary Brazilian musician and composer
8:13
Armani and ‘American Gigolo’ formed the perfect partnership
2:22
A taste of a New Zealand jazz ensemble’s music
1:57
A musical collaboration between Ukrainian, Moldovan and Russian artists
1:27
Remembering Iranian musician Jamshied Sharifi
2:15
Estonian group Puuluup highlights the lyre
2:01
Opinel knife purists cut by change in design
2:53
Latin musician Eddie Palmieri dies
1:58
80 years since atomic bombing of Hiroshima
2:27
Remembering musicians Ziad Rahbani and Daddy Lumba
3:26
Vietnamese band Saigon Soul Revival bringing back pop in Vietnam
2:28
Funk jazz meets Senegal
1:37
The music of London’s Heathrow airport
2:25
Celebrating the Windrush generation from the Caribbean to the UK
1:59
Development
A new global study allows dogs to ‘talk’ to their owners by pressing buttons that say human words
10:34
A symphonic orchestra offers something different at Coachella
2:33
It’s not just primates. Dogs and cats can ‘speak’ too.
10:34
Garifuna musician mourned
3:06
Michael Kiwanuka offers ‘Small Changes’
3:01
Remembering the great Indian tabla master Zakir Hussain
3:32
The late legendary Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan’s posthumous release
2:10
Mariachi singer featured by Kendrick Lamar
2:30
A final thought this week from the late Quincy Jones
2:01
Scottish comedian Janey Godley
1:37
New publishing house dedicated to Asian American stories
7:36