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Hat-trick of gongs for ICRfm 19.10.09

Inishowen Community Radio (ICR) is celebrating a hat-trick of three gongs picked up at the National Community Radio Awards in Athlone last week. The event was organised by Craol, the national forum representing over 20 community radio stations in Ireland. The local station won awards in the three categories, Altnerative Scheduling, Social Gain and Commissioned Programming. The three programmes that won are, respectively, ‘Thall is Abhus’; ‘Local Election Coverage' in association with the Inishowen Independent newspaper and ‘Paying Peanuts'. Station manager Jim Doherty said the entire ICRfm team was thrilled with the win.
“This is great news and shows what a talented, hard-working and dedicated crew of people we have here at the station. I think it’s important to point out that much of the credit here goes to the army of volunteers and contributors who worked on the programmes. This is the community making programmes for the community, a large part of what we’re about," said Jim. Pictured from left are ICRfm's Susan Logue, Claire McDermott and Marie McDonald with the three awards picked up at the National Community Radio Awards.
‘Thall is Abhus’ is a bi-lingual show featuring traditional Irish music, song and stories presented and produced by Jimmy McBride.
The ‘Local Election Coverage’ was shared jointly by ICR and The Inishowen Independent for the series of debates broadcast in the run-up to the election and the live coverage of the counts from the Inishowen Gateway. “This was one of the first live outside broadcasts ever done by the station and the judges were very impressed by the quality of the analysis, the range of contributors, the duration of the broadcast and the local emphasis. We’re indebted to the Independent’s Liam Porter and Damian Dowds for this. A dedicated crew drawn from staff, volunteers and the local community worked on the programme,” added Jim. Meanwhile, ‘Paying Peanuts’ was a documentary presented and produced by twin sisters Claire and Emma McDermott who travelled to Malawi to examine the lives of peanut farmers and the positive impact that fair trade has had on their lives. It was commissioned under the Simon Cumbers Media Challenge Fund through Irish Aid.
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