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Not What You Meant?  There are 154 definitions for List of This American Life episodes.  Also try: Glass or Ira.

Ira Glass

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Ira Glass


Born March 3 1959 (1959-03-03) (age 49)
Flag of the United States Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Show This American Life
Station(s) WBEZ
Time slot Syndication
Style Presenter
Country United States
Website Official website

Ira Glass (born March 3, 1959) is an American public radio personality, and host and producer of the radio and television show This American Life.

Contents

Early life

Glass was born in Baltimore, Maryland to Barry Glass, an accountant, and Shirley Glass, a psychologist and infidelity researcher. He attended Milford Mill High School in Baltimore (County) where he was active in student theater. He later attended Northwestern University, in Evanston, Illinois, but found himself frustrated with students who were "only interested in getting graduate degrees and making money." He then transferred to Brown University, where he majored in semiotics.[1]

Career

Radio broadcasting

Glass has worked in public radio for some 30 years. He began as an intern at National Public Radio. He was a reporter and host on several NPR programs, including Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Talk of the Nation. Glass wrote, "The very first national public radio show that I worked on was Joe Frank's. I think I was influenced in a huge way... Before I saw Joe put together a show, I had never thought about radio as a place where you could tell a certain kind of story."[2] From November 1990 until September 1995, he co-hosted, with NPR producer Gary Covino a weekly, local program on Chicago Public Radio called The Wild Room. In 1993, Glass said, “I like to think of it as the only show on public radio other than ‘Car Talk’ that both [NPR news analyst] Daniel Schorr and Kurt Cobain could listen to. I think it’s appropriate that the show [which aired on Friday evenings] is on a station that most people don’t listen to at a time when most people won’t hear it. And the fact that public radio never puts a new show on the air or takes any off is definitely to our advantage.”[1] In 1995, the MacArthur Foundation approached Torey Malatia, general manager of Chicago Public Radio, with an offer of $150,000 to produce a show featuring local Chicago writers and performance artists. Maletia approached Glass who countered that he wanted to do a weekly program with a budget of $300,000. In 1998, Covino told the Chicago Reader, "The show he proposed was The Wild Room. He just didn't call it The Wild Room."[2] Covino continued to produce the Wild Room until February of 1996. Since 1995, he has hosted and produced This American Life, from WBEZ. The show was nationally syndicated in June 1996 and is distributed by Public Radio International. It reaches over 1.6 million listeners weekly. Glass can be heard in all but one episode. On November 17, 2005, This American Life celebrated its 10th anniversary. The following week, as a special show celebrating the anniversary, the first episode, "New Beginnings", was re-broadcast. Prior to this, the first episode had never been aired outside of Chicago. When the first episode was broadcast in 1995, the show was known as Your Radio Playhouse. That first episode includes interviews with talk-show host Joe Franklin and Ira's mother, as well as stories by Kevin Kelly, founding editor of Wired, and filmmaker, performance artist Lawrence Steger. Interestingly, Glass' father was a radio announcer also during his youth, but Glass never became aware of it until after he had gotten into it himself.

Other works

While in high school, he wrote jokes for Baltimore radio personality Johnny Walker. In September 1999, Ira collaborated on a comic book entitled Radio: An Illustrated Guide with Jessica Abel. The book showcases how This American Life is produced, and how to produce your own radio program. He also served as one of the executive producers of the 2006 feature film Unaccompanied Minors. It is based on the true story of what happened to This American Life contributing editor Susan Burton and her sister Betsy at an airport on the day after Christmas. Burton had already produced a segment on This American Life about the same experience before the story was adapted to film. On March 22 2007, Glass and company began airing a television version of This American Life as half hour episodes on the Showtime network. During an interview with Pat Morrison on KPCC, Southern California Public Radio, Glass revealed that he lost thirty pounds for this venture.

Personal life

Due to a recent encounter with objectors to a segment of his show, Glass became a vegetarian. He discusses this in an April 2007 appearance on David Letterman.[3] For a time, he dated cartoonist Lynda Barry and moved to Chicago in 1989 to be with her. He called Barry his "little ghetto girl" and she does not remember the relationship fondly. Barry is quoted in a 1998 Chicago Reader article as saying of Glass, "I went out with him. It was the worst thing I ever did. When we broke up he gave me a watch and said I was boring and shallow, and I wasn't enough in the moment for him, and it was over." In the same article, Glass is quoted on his feelings about their breakup: "I was an idiot. I was in the wrong. About the breakup... About so many things with her. Anything bad she says about me I can confirm."[4] Barry has written a comic story about the relationship, entitled "Head Lice and My Worst Boyfriend," in her book One! Hundred! Demons!. In August 2005, Glass married Chicago editor Anaheed Alani. Glass and Alani moved from Chicago to New York in March 2006. Noted composer Philip Glass is his father's first cousin. Through Philip Glass he is also related to J Stuart, singer in the indie rock band The Cloud Room.[5]

Notes

  1. ^ Greenberg, Paul. "The semio-grads", The Boston Globe, May 16, 2004. Retrieved on 2007-05-01. 
  2. ^ Glass, Ira; Sedaris, David. Ira and David Discuss Joe Frank (.MP3) [Audio]. joefrank.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
  3. ^ Ira Glass Talks About Chickens, Karen Davis, Going Veg. David Letterman via YouTube (2007-04-20). Retrieved on 2007-05-05.
  4. ^ Michael Miner. "Ira Glass's Messy Divorce: What Becomes of the Brokenhearted?", Chicago Reader, 20 Nov 1998. Retrieved on 2007-03-15. 
  5. ^ Deborah Solomon. "This American TV Show", The New York Times, 4 Mar 2007. Retrieved on 2007-03-18. 

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Ira Glass from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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