The piece was very interesting, and covered well several aspects of the bus trade across boarders. It seems only to lack a little bit of context regarding the prevalence of this practice in the rest of the country or at least the region. A little historical context as to the growth or decline of the practice over time. The anecdotal nature of the story was certainly a strong point and need not be altered, but it would benefit from just little bit of expansion that would also add depth.
I like this piece a lot. It's a very interesting topic that I think most people outside of the Honduran immigrant community have little knowledge of, so I found it terribly fascinating. The piece was well-produced and there was good use of sound. The process of transporting the buses was explained very thoroughly in an easy-to-understand manner. I highly recommend this piece!
Simply put this producer is good. How refreshing to hear a sound rich reporter piece. Sylvia Maria Gross has put together an engaging and highly listenable piece with a variety of sources and sounds. She handles the tranlation voice-overs quite well, better than I've heard on national shows. And it's a fascinating immigrant story detailing the physical connection families have to homelands by sending actual goods to loved ones they left behind. This piece also shows the disparity in the standard of living through the telling of the personal connection in shipping goods. This piece would work well on any news magazine show though perhaps it's longer than the usual reporter piece. Any station with immigrant communities, (and isn't that all of them really?), would do well to air this piece. I don't think this is a uniquely NYC feature. Most communities would have a connection to this piece.
Comments for Fresh Direct to Honduras
Produced by Sylvia Maria Gross
Other pieces by KCUR
Rating Summary
3 comments
Jennifer Oladipo
Posted on January 17, 2005 at 02:24 PM | Permalink
Review of Fresh Direct to Honduras
The piece was very interesting, and covered well several aspects of the bus trade across boarders. It seems only to lack a little bit of context regarding the prevalence of this practice in the rest of the country or at least the region. A little historical context as to the growth or decline of the practice over time. The anecdotal nature of the story was certainly a strong point and need not be altered, but it would benefit from just little bit of expansion that would also add depth.
Scott Gurian
Posted on July 17, 2004 at 10:30 AM | Permalink
Review of Fresh Direct to Honduras
I like this piece a lot. It's a very interesting topic that I think most people outside of the Honduran immigrant community have little knowledge of, so I found it terribly fascinating. The piece was well-produced and there was good use of sound. The process of transporting the buses was explained very thoroughly in an easy-to-understand manner. I highly recommend this piece!
Dmae Lo Roberts
Posted on July 01, 2004 at 07:55 AM | Permalink
Review of Fresh Direct to Honduras
Simply put this producer is good. How refreshing to hear a sound rich reporter piece. Sylvia Maria Gross has put together an engaging and highly listenable piece with a variety of sources and sounds. She handles the tranlation voice-overs quite well, better than I've heard on national shows. And it's a fascinating immigrant story detailing the physical connection families have to homelands by sending actual goods to loved ones they left behind. This piece also shows the disparity in the standard of living through the telling of the personal connection in shipping goods. This piece would work well on any news magazine show though perhaps it's longer than the usual reporter piece. Any station with immigrant communities, (and isn't that all of them really?), would do well to air this piece. I don't think this is a uniquely NYC feature. Most communities would have a connection to this piece.