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 | Julie Amacher
Julie Amacher’s desire to introduce others to
great music is what led her to radio. She began her professional
broadcast career at a station in Sun Prairie, Wisc. She went from rock
‘n’ roll to the Rocky Mountains, where she found her niche in public
radio at KUNC in Greeley, Colo. Julie spent 13 years at KUNC, where she
managed the announcers and their eclectic music format. During that
time, she earned four national awards for best announcer. She joined
Classical 24 in 1997.
|  | Scott Blankenship
Scott Blankenship
started his radio career in college when he began working as a
volunteer at a local cable radio station, announcing alternative and
new rock music. His love and appreciation of classical music began at
public radio station KVNO in Omaha, where he spent 13 years in various
on-air and management roles, five of those years as the morning
drive-time host.
Indications that radio
was in his blood go back to age five, when he used a corkboard and a
battered phonograph as a make-shift radio studio, his father's Air
Force issue flashlight served as his "on air" light. In his spare time,
Blankenship is an avid cyclist and amateur playwright with several
produced scripts to his credit. |  | Bob Christiansen
A founding voice of Classical 24, Bob Christiansen has managed to
combine his knowledge of classical music and history with a sharp wit
and a talent for foreign languages into a 38-year radio career. While
studying the ramifications of the “Time of Troubles” on the Grand Duchy
of Moscow, he led a secret life as the evening man on the Northern
Illinois University radio station. He teamed with Bill Morelock in 1987
to create the nationally syndicated Bob and Bill. | 
| Jeff Esworthy
Jeff Esworthy has been the overnight host of
Classical 24 since 1996. He’s a public radio veteran with more than 20
years behind the microphone, where he’s hosted everything from folk to
jazz to progressive rock. A hobbyist musician and collector of
instruments from around the world, Jeff has what he describes as a
“passable” command of southern string-band music on fiddle and banjo,
and he is a long-time student of the classical music of Northern India
on instruments such as the sitar, sarangi and tabla. |

| Ward Jacobson
Ward Jacobson has enjoyed
a radio career spanning over two decades as a morning show host and
sportscaster, as well as producer/host of an interview program where he
chatted up both local and national authors, musicians, politicians and
newsmakers. He is also a past winner of the prestigious Marconi Award.
Jacobson's love of classical music stems from a childhood influenced by
his bass-baritone father and piano-teaching mother. While still a
college student in Nebraska, he began singing with the Abendmusik
Chorus and took part in concert tours to venues as varied as England’s
Lincoln Cathedral, the Vatican, Salzburg Cathedral, Auschwitz and
Moscow. When not singing, he works to develop his guitar-strumming
repertoire.
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| Valerie Kahler
Valerie Kahler came to the Classical 24 team
after more than a decade as a classical host and music director at KNAU
in Flagstaff, Ariz. She holds a degree in cello performance and plays
piano in self-defense, but feels most at home in front of a
microphone—as your companion for an evening of classical music, or
singing classic tunes in a club. |

| Gillian Martin
Gillian Martin was a music major at Southern
Illinois University-Carbondale when her first classical radio career
began. Moving from volunteer to student worker to part-time announcer
to Music Director at WSIU-FM, she spent six years on-air there before
leaving to pursue a graduate degree in theater. After several years of
working in theater and arts administration, Gillian got back into
broadcasting in 2005 when she joined Minnesota Public Radio's on-air
staff part-time. She is delighted to be a part of Classical 24. In her
off hours, Gillian thoroughly enjoys a good sing-along, is passionate
about nonprofit bookkeeping, and loves to hear smart people debate big
questions. |

| Mindy Ratner
Mindy Ratner began her career in public
broadcasting following her graduation from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, working first for the local public television
station and then for Wisconsin Public Radio. She moved on to stations
in Cincinnati and Philadelphia before joining Minnesota Public Radio in
1983. In 1998 and '99, Ratner took a leave of absence to work as a
music host and producer for China Radio International in Beijing. Her
spare time is devoted to international travel; folk, ballroom and
contradancing; singing in the Minnesota Chorale; her two cats, and
trying to stay ahead of the weeds in her garden. | 
| Alison Young
Prior to joining Minnesota
Public Radio, Young served as an assistant producer for KUHF-FM in
Houston for "The Front Row" and was host for KUHF's "Sunday Afternoon
Concert." She enjoyed a successful career as a concert flutist,
performing as a guest with the Boston Symphony and with the Atlanta
Symphony. An intrepid traveler, she has given recitals in the United
States, Europe, South America and Asia while managing to climb a
mountain or two in the process. She also served as the principal
flutist with the Houston Ballet Orchestra.
Young
began her broadcast life at Houston Public Radio answering phones
during fundraising campaigns. While an illness cut her performing
career short, she made a vibrant artistic transition, making the
natural move to broadcasting. She says, "the intellectual stimulation
of speaking with dancers, writers, artists, actors and musicians is
extremely rewarding." She received her Bachelor of Music degree from
the University of Southern California and a master’s degree from the
Cleveland Institute of Music. | 
| John Zech
John Zech got started in
broadcasting as a news anchor at his high school’s closed-circuit
television station (KRUD). While in school at St. Olaf College, his
love of classical music earned him his first “real” radio experience at
WCAL-FM. After a dozen years doing virtually everything there was to do
at a small public radio station, John crossed over into the private
sector, producing and voicing an audio reading program for a major
educational publisher, managing multilingual translation projects for
an international communications firm, and generally learning what it’s
like to work for a living. Having seen the light, John returned to
radio in 1992. After deciding his zen garden was too much of a
headache, John looks for enlightenment on the tennis court and the
billiard table instead.
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