USAGM starts firing full-time Voice of America employees
The USAGM is sending termination notices to full-time employees at Voice of America, The Desk has learned.
Here is more on the new cuts happening at the VOA.
She is totally out of whack.![]()
USAGM starts firing full-time Voice of America employees
The USAGM is sending termination notices to full-time employees at Voice of America, The Desk has learned.thedesk.net
Here is more on the new cuts happening at the VOA.
See:
US scrambles to bring back VOA’s Persian service amid Iran-Israel conflict
Employees of Voice of America’s Persian-language service who were sidelined by the Trump administration have been hastily called back to duty as Iran and Israel exchange missile strikes in a high-stakes Middle East conflict.
The U.S. Agency for Global Media told employees placed on administrative leave to immediately return to their roles providing counter-programming to Iranian state media as the conflict between the two nations escalated Friday, according to an email seen by POLITICO and three people familiar with the situation.
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No mention about the transmitters which could reach the target area.
They need one of those white coats with belts around it for her!
You mean they finally woke up to the usefulness of VOA? It took a war for them to figure that one out? SMH.See:
US scrambles to bring back VOA’s Persian service amid Iran-Israel conflict
Employees of Voice of America’s Persian-language service who were sidelined by the Trump administration have been hastily called back to duty as Iran and Israel exchange missile strikes in a high-stakes Middle East conflict.
The U.S. Agency for Global Media told employees placed on administrative leave to immediately return to their roles providing counter-programming to Iranian state media as the conflict between the two nations escalated Friday, according to an email seen by POLITICO and three people familiar with the situation.
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No mention about the transmitters which could reach the target area.
Wonder if they regret shutting down the USAGM Kuwait transmitter facility, which was actually in the midst of an expansion project when the plug was pulled.You mean they finally woke up to the usefulness of VOA? It took a war for them to figure that one out? SMH.
Does anyone seriously think anyone in Iran is digging out their old portable shortwave radios to listen to VOA? Or maybe they hurried up and ordered one with prime shipping from Amazon.You mean they finally woke up to the usefulness of VOA? It took a war for them to figure that one out? SMH.
Who knows.Does anyone seriously think anyone in Iran is digging out their old portable shortwave radios to listen to VOA? Or maybe they hurried up and ordered one with prime shipping from Amazon.
Radio Farda, under the auspices of RFE/RL, was the USAGM broadcaster to Iran. They used both mediumwave and shortwave to target the country.Does anyone seriously think anyone in Iran is digging out their old portable shortwave radios to listen to VOA? Or maybe they hurried up and ordered one with prime shipping from Amazon.
But, as has been discussed ad nauseum on here, what good is a strong foreign SW signal if nobody can hear it?
Now, with Iran on the brink and the world watching, VOA’s Persian division is back on the frontlines. Journalists say they are preparing to resume full satellite TV broadcasts in Iran, not just online updates.
Kol Israel shut down what was left of its shortwave service around a dozen years ago. In its final few years the only broadcasts were in Farsi directed to Iran.Is Iran retaliating against this station?
I knew they did Farsi to Iran, didn't know the final sign-off was so long ago.Kol Israel shut down what was left of its shortwave service around a dozen years ago. In its final few years the only broadcasts were in Farsi directed to Iran.
Kol Israel once a much more extensive international shortwave service in multiple languages that was easily heard around the world. There were also shortwave rebroadcasts of the domestic Israeli networks.
Kol Israel is not "a station" but a network of stations covering all of Israel. It has an Arabic service, too.Is Iran retaliating against this station?
Sorry, I know that and should have posted the clarification. But most of us still call it by its old name.Kol Israel was actually shut down in 2017 alongside its parent, the Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA). The radio stations were then transferred to the new broadcaster known as the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation (IPBC) where they were rebranded under the IPBC's blanket branding of Kan (meaning "here" in Hebrew) or Makan (meaning "place" in Arabic). The international service is now known as Kan REKA.
When I started SWLing in the '60s, Kol Israel even had programs in Yiddish (a Hebrew/German/Russian hybrid) and Ladino (Hebrew/Spanish) for European Jews abroad. My paternal grandparents, who came over from Ukraine in the early '20s, spoke Yiddish at home and the English they had learned at night school in their dealings with the outside world.Kol Israel is not "a station" but a network of stations covering all of Israel. It has an Arabic service, too.
There are 3 Hebrew networks, one in Arabic and one for the different languages of Jewish migrants to Israel who have not yet learned good Hebrew. There are also a bunch of online specialty formats and a variety of language service.
My understanding (I visited Kol Israel some years back) is that they have both a well-known studio location in Tel Aviv as well as "secret" backup facilities available.
Back in the stone age, Iran had a transmitter on 15084 that put a decent signal into midwest USA during the day. Before the Shah was toppled, it was basically Iranian music with commercials including a shouted "Pepsi".That changed with the students taking over the station with the hostage crisis. I couldn't understand a word, but I could hear the students on the air, sounding like they had no idea what they were doing.Sorry, I know that and should have posted the clarification. But most of us still call it by its old name.
15084 and 9009 (later 9109) were the oddball frequencies I used to hear Kol Israel on.Back in the stone age, Iran had a transmitter on 15084 that put a decent signal into midwest USA during the day. Before the Shah was toppled, it was basically Iranian music with commercials including a shouted "Pepsi".That changed with the students taking over the station with the hostage crisis. I couldn't understand a word, but I could hear the students on the air, sounding like they had no idea what they were doing.
Bringing things to today, an Isreali round hit an Iranian TV station during a broadcast. https://www.axios.com/2025/06/16/iran-state-tv-bombed-israel-strike