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     <channel>
     <ttl>60</ttl>
     <title>Youth Radio-TV</title>
     <link>http://www.youthradio.org</link>
     <itunes:author>Youth Radio</itunes:author>
     <language>en-us</language>
     <copyright>&#xA9; Youth Radio 2006</copyright>
     <itunes:subtitle>Visual Storytelling from a Youth Perspective</itunes:subtitle>
     <itunes:summary>
       For more than a decade, Youth Radio has been highlighting young people's stories, passions, and struggles through broadcasts on local, national, and international outlets. Now, with the advent of technology, Youth Radio-TV productions can be downloaded directly to your desktops and iPods via vodcasts. From documentary storytelling, to first person narratives, to youth reporting on politics and culture, Youth Radio-TV explores the lives of young people through a fresh new lens. Visit our website, www.youthradio.org, for more features, stories, podcasts, video podcasts-- and to listen to our web radio station. You can also find our web radio station on iTunes Radio under the Eclectic, Public and Urban categories.
     </itunes:summary> 
      <description>
    For more than a decade, Youth Radio has been highlighting young people's stories, passions, and struggles through broadcasts on local, national, and international outlets. Now, with the advent of technology, Youth Radio-TV productions can be downloaded directly to your desktops and iPods via vodcasts. From documentary storytelling, to first person narratives, to youth reporting on politics and culture, Youth Radio-TV explores the lives of young people through a fresh new lens. Visit our website, www.youthradio.org, for more features, stories, podcasts, video podcasts-- and to listen to our web radio station. You can also find our web radio station on iTunes Radio under the Eclectic, Public and Urban categories.
     </description>      
     <itunes:owner>
          <itunes:name>Youth Radio</itunes:name>
          <itunes:email>podcasts@youthradio.org</itunes:email>
     </itunes:owner>
     <itunes:image href="http://www.youthradio.org/images/itunesyrtv.jpg"/>
     <category>Youth</category>
     <itunes:category text="Public Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Talk Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Movies &amp; Television"/>
    
     <item>
     <title>The Turf, The Village</title>
     <itunes:author>Youth Radio-TV: Pendarvis Harshaw</itunes:author>
     <description>
The first in a series of videos inspired by Youth Radio's newsroom commentaries, The Turf/The Village illustrates how one student's experience on the other side of the world offered him a fresh take on his hometown- Oakland, California.   
     </description>
     <itunes:subtitle>Why home is home...</itunes:subtitle>
     <itunes:summary>
The first in a series of videos inspired by Youth Radio's newsroom commentaries, The Turf/The Village illustrates how one student's experience on the other side of the world offered him a fresh take on his hometown- Oakland, California.   
     </itunes:summary>
     <enclosure url="http://www.youthradio.org/podcasts/yrtv/060519_turfvillage.m4v" length="14761696" type="video/mpeg" />
     <guid>
     http://www.youthradio.org/podcasts/yrtv/060519_turfvillage.m4v
     </guid>
     <pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2006 16:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
     <category>Youth</category>
     <itunes:category text="Public Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Talk Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Movies &amp; Television"/>
     <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
     <itunes:duration>2:46</itunes:duration>
     <itunes:keywords>home, village, turf, africa, ghana, oakland, youth, students, youth radio</itunes:keywords>
     </item>
     <item>
     <title>Sideshows</title>
     <itunes:author>Youth Radio-TV: Krystle Martin</itunes:author>
     <description>
   For over a decade, the city of Oakland has been home to the infamous Sideshow. The burning rubber, the rowdy crowds and the police chases come with the territory for this illegal pastime. Youth Radio's Krystle Martin investigates why some people are trying to make these late-night gatherings a legitimate sport.
     </description>
     <itunes:subtitle>An illegal pastime.</itunes:subtitle>
     <itunes:summary>
   For over a decade, the city of Oakland has been home to the infamous Sideshow. The burning rubber, the rowdy crowds and the police chases come with the territory for this illegal pastime. Youth Radio's Krystle Martin investigates why some people are trying to make these late-night gatherings a legitimate sport.
     </itunes:summary>
     <enclosure url="http://www.youthradio.org/podcasts/yrtv/051028_sideshows.m4v" length="16345618" type="video/mpeg" />
     <guid>
     http://www.youthradio.org/podcasts/yrtv/051028_sideshows.m4v
     </guid>
     <pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 2005 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
     <category>Youth</category>
     <itunes:category text="Public Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Talk Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Movies &amp; Television"/>
     <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
     <itunes:duration>3:07</itunes:duration>
     <itunes:keywords>sideshow, oakland, illegal, police youth, students, youth radio</itunes:keywords>
     </item>
     <item>
     <title>Voices from a Forgotten Valley</title>
     <itunes:author>Youth Radio-TV</itunes:author>
     <description>
     Earlier this year, two girls found the body of a murdered youth on their way to school   in Visitacion Valley. This little known San Francisco district has had a history of neglect, poverty and violence, and in recent years has seen a rise in gun related youth homicides. Unfortunately this scenario is not limited to Visitacion Valley, but is occurring in other cities in California and across America. The recounting of the girls' discovery serves as the launching point for a Youth Radio probe into the impact of violence on the lives of youth attempting to grow up in the Valley.   
     </description>
     <itunes:subtitle>A history of neglect, poverty and violence.</itunes:subtitle>
     <itunes:summary>
     Earlier this year, two girls found the body of a murdered youth on their way to school in Visitacion Valley. This little known San Francisco district has had a history of neglect, poverty and violence, and in recent years has seen a rise in gun related youth homicides. Unfortunately this scenario is not limited to Visitacion Valley, but is occurring in other cities in California and across America. The recounting of the girls' discovery serves as the launching point for a Youth Radio probe into the impact of violence on the lives of youth attempting to grow up in the Valley.
     </itunes:summary>
     <link>http://www.youthradio.org/video/cc050930_valley.shtml</link>
     <enclosure url="http://www.youthradio.org/podcasts/yrtv/050930_visvalley_cc.m4v" length="32268278" type="video/mpeg"/>
     <guid>http://www.youthradio.org/podcasts/yrtv/050930_visvalley_cc.m4v</guid>
     <pubDate>Fri, 30 Sep 2005 21:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
     <category>Youth</category>
     <itunes:category text="Public Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Talk Radio"/>
     <itunes:category text="Movies &amp; Television"/>
     <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
     <itunes:duration>6:17</itunes:duration>
     <itunes:keywords>san francisco, valley, violence, poverty, visitacion, youth, students, youth radio
     </itunes:keywords>
     </item>

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