14 min.

Andrew Kopkind: Gutsy, Gifted and Groundbreaking Journalist Brattleboro Words Trail Podcast

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Brilliant chronicler of the 1960s, Andrew Kopkind was a courageous, insightful and remarkably groundbreaking journalist always 'sniffing the zeitgeist' and pushing boundaries while covering race, civil rights, war and poverty. An openly gay man in an era when such freedom was sorely contested, he co-produced “Lavender Hour,” the first gay and lesbian vari­ety program on American commercial radio with his long-time partner John Scagliotti. After obtaining degrees from Cornell University and the London School of Economics, he reported for Time, the New Republic, the Village Voice and many other publications before becoming Associate Editor of The Nation, America’s oldest continuously published weekly magazine. Kopkind wrote two books: America: The Mixed Curse (1969) and The Thirty Years' Wars: Dispatches and Diversions of a Radical Journalist, 1965-1994, an anthology of his writing published posthumously in 1995, edited by JoAnn Wypijewski. In 1974, Kopkind bought Tree Frog Farm in Guilford, Vermont, which became his and John Scagliotti's home and a gathering place for like minded journalists, filmmakers, and other culture makers -- like episode producer/narrator Maria Margaronis -- who shared Kopkind’s passion for social justice. When Kopkind died of cancer in 1994 at age 59, the Kopkind Colony was founded at Tree Frog Farm to remember his work. The Colony, under the continued direction of Scagliotti, Wypijewski and others, mentors journalists, filmmakers and community activists through a summer residency program and other activities that continue there today.

Brilliant chronicler of the 1960s, Andrew Kopkind was a courageous, insightful and remarkably groundbreaking journalist always 'sniffing the zeitgeist' and pushing boundaries while covering race, civil rights, war and poverty. An openly gay man in an era when such freedom was sorely contested, he co-produced “Lavender Hour,” the first gay and lesbian vari­ety program on American commercial radio with his long-time partner John Scagliotti. After obtaining degrees from Cornell University and the London School of Economics, he reported for Time, the New Republic, the Village Voice and many other publications before becoming Associate Editor of The Nation, America’s oldest continuously published weekly magazine. Kopkind wrote two books: America: The Mixed Curse (1969) and The Thirty Years' Wars: Dispatches and Diversions of a Radical Journalist, 1965-1994, an anthology of his writing published posthumously in 1995, edited by JoAnn Wypijewski. In 1974, Kopkind bought Tree Frog Farm in Guilford, Vermont, which became his and John Scagliotti's home and a gathering place for like minded journalists, filmmakers, and other culture makers -- like episode producer/narrator Maria Margaronis -- who shared Kopkind’s passion for social justice. When Kopkind died of cancer in 1994 at age 59, the Kopkind Colony was founded at Tree Frog Farm to remember his work. The Colony, under the continued direction of Scagliotti, Wypijewski and others, mentors journalists, filmmakers and community activists through a summer residency program and other activities that continue there today.

14 min.