Stacy Bond
Stacy Bond is Consulting Producer to KQED Interactive. She's also a journalist and the founder of AudioLuxe, a San Francisco-based production company and podcast-incubator.
Bond has been making sound-rich, engaging radio for close to twenty years, most recently as the Producer of The California Report, a statewide radio news-magazine heard by 750,000 listeners weekly. At National Public Radio in Washington, DC, she was part of the Talk of the Nation w/ Neal Conan team that produced NPR's Peabody Award-winning news coverage of the September 11th terrorist attacks.
She is a frequent speaker on changes in public media and is the author of two hacks in O'Reilly's Podcasting: Tips and Tools for Blogging Out Loud. She also teaches Audio Production at the University of San Francisco.
Currently hard at work on a top secret audio project, she's allowed her hobby as a visual artist to fall by the wayside (but only for the moment). She lives in San Francisco with her husband, television producer Rich Bartlebaugh.
Related Blog Articles
- Digg vs. Reddit
- Published: Jun 12, 2007
Shove over "Karma"-whores and make room -- disillusioned Diggers want a seat on the piano bench. Media participation is, after all, an inalienable right! This was the sentiment at work last month when disgruntled fans of the social news site Digg began showing up suddenly and loudly on Reddit, a smaller social news site.
- YouTube: LisaNova
- Published: Apr 21, 2007
It's just about impossible to keep anything good a secret these days. An underground favorite will not stay underground for long, especially now that everyone watches the internet. And so it is that one of my favorite home-brew media makers has made the leap from the embedded screen to the small screen.
- Tipped-off: Pleasing Podcasts for Personal Perfection
- Published: Feb 06, 2007
I want to do a lot of things and naturally I want to do each and every one of them exceedingly well. I know that with a little hard work, I can achieve something that resembles across-the-board precision-accuracy in my mastery of a career, a couple of side-hustles, a summer sport, a winter sport and perhaps a hobby or two. Ah, but it's a delicate balance.
Which is why I tend to lo-o-o-ve tips. And I especially love podcasts about tips. Tips help you do things better, faster, smarter -- which allows you time to do, well, more things.
- Podcasts for Winos
- Published: Dec 26, 2006
I should be drunk as I write this...infused with holiday spirits and lusciously buffered against the crisp Northern California air. After all, it's that special time of year when holiday excursions to Napa or Sonoma help reinforce to your out-of-town guests that yes, it's expensive, but you live in California for a reason, dammit!
But how to predict which tasting rooms will be over-run by tourists this season? How to determine which wine pairs best with that Niman Ranch Black Forest Ham?
You may be inclined to seek answers by listening to one of any number of locally-produced wine-related podcasts. If so, I must warn you that there are few things more sobering than listening to a podcast about wine. I sampled flights of episodes from three programs and was never entirely satisfied.