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・ Greg Ball (cyclist)
・ Greg Ball (politician)
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・ Greg Balsdon
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Greg Barron
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Greg Barron : ウィキペディア英語版
Greg Barron

Greg Rowe Barron (born June 14, 1946) is a two-time George Foster Peabody Award-winning American radio and television journalist, producer and communications executive. His early radio feature work influenced public radio storytelling and how sound is used in documentary production.〔Vick, Karl (January 15, 1980) "Tragedy of Cambodia unfolds in the sounds" The Minneapolis Star, https://ia601506.us.archive.org/17/items/GRBhistorytext/Mps%20Star_Cambodia.pdf〕〔Strickler, Jeff (December 31, 1982) "Barron singles out singles as topic for his TV debut" Minneapolis Star and Tribune https://ia601506.us.archive.org/17/items/GRBhistorytext/Strib%20re%20WCCO.pdf〕 His work as a producer for Minnesota Public Radio between 1972 and 1980 was recognized by numerous regional and national journalism awards〔Complete awards list https://ia801506.us.archive.org/17/items/GRBhistorytext/GRB_Awards_List_text.pdf〕 and he was an early advocate of the use of high fidelity stereophonic sound as an integral element of radio journalism.〔Mehr, Sheila (June 4, 1980) "Twice a Peabody Award winner, Barron's serious about news" The Highland Villager https://ia601506.us.archive.org/17/items/GRBhistorytext/Villager%20article.pdf〕〔Boxmeyer, Don (June 3, 1978) "Gonna Fly Now" Saint Paul Pioneer Press-Dispatch https://ia601506.us.archive.org/17/items/GRBhistorytext/Pioneer%20Press%20article.pdf〕
==Personal life and early career==

Barron is a graduate of Benjamin Franklin High School (Los Angeles, California). He studied broadcast production, journalism and speech arts at Los Angeles City College and California State University, Los Angeles. He started his broadcasting career at KVWM-AM, a small radio station in Show Low, Arizona. Following his return to Los Angeles he became a reporter, producer and, at age 21, public affairs director of KPFK-FM〔KPFK-FM "Folio" program guide: https://archive.org/stream/julyfolio70kpfkrich#page/n1/mode/2up〕 the Pacifica Radio public radio station in North Hollywood, California. While there, he co-developed, and became editor-in-chief of a then groundbreaking magazine-style public affairs program—''P.M. Journal''.〔KPFK-FM "Folio" program guide: "P.M. Journal" https://archive.org/stream/marcfolio70kpfkrich#page/8/mode/2up〕 The program may have been the first major-market public radio news and public affairs "magazine" program broadcast in the United States: It was developed and launched in 1970〔KPFK-FM "Folio" program guide: "P.M. Journal" https://archive.org/stream/marcfolio70kpfkrich#page/8/mode/2up〕 and was modeled after CBS’ ''60 Minutes'', the first U.S. television news magazine, which debuted in September, 1968.〔CBS.60 Minutes http://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-very-first-60-minutes〕 ''P.M. Journal'' preceded by at least one year the May, 1971 launch of National Public Radio's (NPR) magazine news program ''All Things Considered''. While at KPFK, he began his documentary production career with ''Soledad: The Prison'', which won the Radio & Television News Association of Southern California's Golden Mike Award.

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