Dan Rodricks

Dan Rodricks is an award-winning columnist for the Baltimore Sun newspaper,[1] and host of the Roughly Speaking podcast for baltimoresun.com. He was previously the host of Midday, a two-hour, daily talk show on WYPR FM 88.1, the NPR station in Baltimore, and the host of Rodricks For Breakfast on WMAR-TV, the Dan Rodricks Show on WBAL Radio and a long-time contributor of features and commentary to WBAL-TV.

Rodricks started writing a column for the Baltimore Evening Sun in 1979. The column has appeared at least twice per week, but most often three times per week, ever since. The column moved to the consolidated morning and evening editions of the Sun in 1990.

Rodricks' "Dear Drug Dealers" series[2] in The Sun, a public call for an end to criminal violence in Baltimore, won the 2006 Excellence in Urban Journalism Award from the Freedom Forum and the Enterprise Foundation and the 2005 Public Service Award from the Chesapeake Associated Press. Thousands of ex-felons contacted Rodricks seeking help in post-prison employment. Rodricks won national awards, including the National Headliners Award for commentary and the Heywood Broun Award from the Newspaper Guild for columns that championed the underdog. His columns won numerous awards from the Maryland-Delaware-D.C. Press Association. Rodricks has frequently been cited as best columnist by readers of Baltimore magazine.

From 1989 until 1993, Rodricks hosted a nightly talk show on WBAL-AM as well as a five-hour Saturday morning show that ran until 1995. His radio documentaries won the Silver Medal in an international broadcast competition in 1993. Rodricks weekly hosted a live, local-interest television show, "Rodricks For Breakfast" on WMAR-TV from early 1995 until late 1999. His Midday show ran on WYPR from 2008 until 2015, when Rodricks created the Roughly Speaking podcast for the Baltimore Sun. A collection of Rodricks' columns, “Mencken Doesn’t Live Here Anymore,” was published in 1989.

References

  1. Baltimore Sun (21 July 2012). "Dan Rodricks". baltimoresun.com.
  2. Baltimore Sun (10 July 2013). "Dear drug dealers". baltimoresun.com.

External links

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