Larry Bensky (born
May 1,
1937) is a
literary and
political journalist with more than forty years experience in both print and
broadcast media, as well as a teacher and long-time
political activist. He is well known for his work with
Pacifica Radio station
KPFA-FM in
Berkeley, California, and for the many nationally-broadcast hearings he anchored for the Pacifica network.
A native of
New York City, Bensky graduated from
Stuyvesant High School in 1954 and, with departmental honors, from
Yale University, where he was
managing editor of the
Yale Daily News. He is married and has one daughter.
Career as journalist
Prior to his broadcasting career (and continuing throughout), Bensky worked as a print journalist and editor. He worked at the Minneapolis Star-Tribune after college, while attending graduate school at the University of Minnesota. He then worked as an editor at Random House, before moving to France, where he was
Paris editor of
The Paris Review from 1964 to 1966.
[ Sunday Salon website] He then returned to New York, as an editor of the New York Times Sunday Book Review, and also wrote daily book reviews. But his views on the
war in Vietnam were not well received by editors of the Times, and several of his reviews and features were rejected. In 1968, he moved to the
San Francisco Bay Area to take over as managing editor of the radical, anti-Vietnam War publication,
Ramparts magazine,
[Judith Scherr, Berkeley Daily Planet, May 4, 2007] working closely with editor-in-chief
Robert Scheer.
After leaving
Ramparts, Bensky worked for a time at
San Francisco radio station
KSAN-FM, before joining the staff of KPFA-FM in Berkeley. In 1972, he anchored and produced Pacifica Radio's coverage of the
Democratic and
Republican national conventions, both held in
Miami, along with the attendant massive
anti-war protests, dubbed "The Siege of Miami".
Bensky served as station manager for KPFA from 1974-77. After returning to KSAN as a news anchor, reporter, and talk show host, he narrowly missed accompanying Congressman
Leo Ryan to investigate conditions at the
Jonestown colony in
Guyana in 1978.
(Ryan and four journalists were shot to death on an airstrip, precipitating the mass murder-suicide of over 900 people.) In the early 1980s, Bensky turned his attention to the
revolutions and American interventions in
Nicaragua and
El Salvador. He produced the PBS documentary, "Nicaragua: These Same Hands" in 1980.
National affairs correspondent
Perhaps best known as national affairs correspondent for
Pacifica Radio from 1987-1998, Bensky covered numerous national and international events for Pacifica, including the
Iran-Contra hearings in 1987, the confirmation hearings for four
Supreme Court justices, the 1990 elections in
Nicaragua, and numerous demonstrations and protests in
Washington and elsewhere. Most recently, he anchored Pacifica's live coverage of the
September 11 Commission hearings, and co-anchored Pacifica's coverage of the 2004 Democratic and Republican conventions, as well as the Presidential debates. He was anchor for Pacifica's extensive coverage of the post 2004 election controversy in Ohio, as well as several Congressional hearings about the misuse of executive power in the Bush administration.
He recently retired as host of a weekly two-hour radio talk show,
Sunday Salon, originating at
KPFA in Berkeley. The broadcasts are archived at SundaySalon.org. Among his guests were numerous literary and political luminaries, including the late Senator
Paul Wellstone,
Paul Krugman,
Manning Marable,
Bernie Sanders,
Jane Smiley,
Calvin Trillin, and
Gary Shteyngart.
Bensky has written for
The Nation, magazine, and was a regular contributor to the
Los Angeles Times Sunday Book Review. A long time resident of Berkeley, he was a political writer and
columnist for the
East Bay Express for fifteen years.
He has also appeared as a guest journalist on
C-Span,
CNN,
The Today Show, and
The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, as well as on San Francisco
Forum (KQED) and
KQED-TV's "This Week in Northern California." In addition, he was founding managing editor (1999-2000) of the web site Mediachannel.org.
Bensky won the prestigious
George Polk award for his coverage of
Iran-Contra, and has won five Gold Reel awards from the
National Federation of Community Broadcasters. He has won a career achievement award from the
Society of Professional Journalists, and the Golden Gadfly award from
Media Alliance.
Educator and activist
In addition to his work as a journalist, Bensky has had a continuing role in the classroom. For twelve years he taught
broadcast journalism classes at
Stanford and courses in
mass communication, journalism, broadcasting, and
political science at
California State University (CSU), East Bay in
Hayward, California. He currently teaches
media criticism and analysis at
Berkeley City College and political science at CSU, East Bay.
Bensky has been a political activist since the 1960s, working with
nuclear disarmament and
anti-war groups in
New York,
Paris, and
San Francisco during the
Vietnam War. He co-designed and wrote numerous successful
direct mail appeals for Modern
progressive organizations, including
Greenpeace, the
Sierra Club, and the
United Farm Workers. He is a devout
pacifist and an outspoken opponent of
capital punishment.
Current activities
Since retiring from regular broadcasting in 2007, Bensky has returned to a lifetime avocation, French language and literature. He is producer and host
of "Radio Proust," a web site which he's developing as a fellow of the Bard College Center (www.Bard.edu/radioproust). He has also developed and is teaching classes about Proust for the
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of California, Berkeley.