Radio serves as a powerful, intimate medium for storytelling and social influence, bridging cultural and geographic divides through the human voice. Mary Louise Kelly, a veteran NPR host, highlights how radio creates "driveway moments"—engrossing listeners in subjects they might otherwise ignore—and discusses the technical challenges of maintaining this connection while managing severe hearing loss. Complementing this perspective, Afghan journalist Kamal Nasir Hamyar details the role of international radio projects like *Sadae Azadi* in Afghanistan, where the medium functioned as a vital tool for education, promoting civil rights, and countering extremist narratives in a region with limited infrastructure. Both accounts underscore the unique capacity of audio to foster empathy and shared discovery, even as digital consumption habits shift the landscape of traditional broadcast journalism.
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