Why is diane rehms voice as it is




















She was hired as an assistant producer and later became the host and producer of two health-oriented programs. The Diane Rehm Show grew from a local program to one with international reach and a weekly on-air audience of more than 2. You can hear the podcast through her website www. New weekly episodes are posted on Fridays. Topics range from the U.

John McCain R-Ariz. It took six weeks the first time and four weeks the second to recover adequately for broadcasting. Rehm has with her speech therapist Susan Miller started a support group for people with spasmodic dysphonia.

The two women expected 15 to 20 people for the first meeting and got 40 instead. Some can seldom utter more than a syllable. Rehm now talks about her work for SD awareness as a calling. It has its trademark see-saw expressiveness, but more importantly, clarity and a lot of strength. Rehm expresses gratitude for her radio career. She had thought it was over, she says. Despite a recent Washington Post article which seemed to suggest Rehm wants to retire in a year or two, Rehm says no.

The show has only been in national distribution a few years; why would she leave now? In fact, Rehm says her ratings have gone up since the illness, perhaps because of the publicity.

So Rehm will continue, using substitute hosts for the periods when she needs the take injections and recover from them. You know, take care of yourself. You gotta go for another shot, go for another shot. When a talk show works, the audience should get a lot of the credit. Websites of The Diane Rehm Show. Also: more information about spasmodic dysphonia on the site of the Dystonia Medical Research Foundation.

Your email address will not be published. I wanted to learn. John was a Renaissance man who taught me so much about music, history, literature, and science. He had a fabulous education and literally became my teacher [and later my husband].

REHM: After staying at home for 14 years raising two wonderful children, I realized they would soon be gone. My husband had his career, but what was I going to do? Within two weeks of finishing that course, a friend of mine said she was volunteering at the tiny little station—WAMU—on the campus of American University [Washington, D.

So I decided to volunteer too. On my very first day, the talk-show host was out sick. The manager was going to do the program and invited me into the studio to help. For 90 minutes we interviewed a representative of the Dairy Council. I was so excited at having had this opportunity and I had asked some challenging questions. My mother died from liver cancer when I was 19, and my father died of a broken heart 11 months after my mother passed away.

I wanted to know why, and there were no answers. REHM: By being concise. Your career as a radio host depends on your voice, which was afflicted by a rare condition called spasmodic dysphonia. How did you deal with that?

It started with a cough, a tiny little cough. I went from doctor to doctor to doctor, all of whom kept putting tubes down my throat. I think the insertion of those tubes did not help my condition.



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