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KBDI television reporter Eden Lane interviewed Ben Dicke and other actors performing in Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson for a feature produced for her program In Focus with Eden Lane Saturday, September 29, 2012 at the Fox Theater in Aurora. Her program appears on channel 12 on Friday nights at 7 p.m. Karl Gehring/The Denver Post
KBDI television reporter Eden Lane interviewed Ben Dicke and other actors performing in Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson for a feature produced for her program In Focus with Eden Lane Saturday, September 29, 2012 at the Fox Theater in Aurora. Her program appears on channel 12 on Friday nights at 7 p.m. Karl Gehring/The Denver Post
Joanne Ostrow of The Denver Post.
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Greg Moody, CBS4

Her Friday night arts series on CPT12-KBDI has covered a slew of theater productions, artists, actors, dancers and writers over the years. This week, Eden Lane devotes a show to a longtime colleague in arts reporting: Greg Moody.

The popular and much missed Moody is her guest Friday at 9:30 p.m. on Channel 12.

Lane asks gentle but crucial questions, encouraging her subjects to speak at length. In this case, she asks the about his long career (in radio, newspaper and TV), his approach to criticism, the boom in arts festivals and the exponential growth of the Denver Center and his next chapter and ongoing work as a playwright.

KBDI arts reporter Eden Lane. Her program appears on channel 12 on Friday nights at 9:30 p.m. Karl Gehring/The Denver Post

Moody notes that he still provides arts reporting for Channel 4 on a freelance basis. And he reminisces about his early days in Denver (at channels 9 and 4), when TV stations sent him all over the state to cover things like the Telluride Bluegrass Festival and the music acts at the State Fair in Pueblo.

“I explored the state like you can’t believe,” he says.

But what neither Moody nor Lane tackle is the state of local arts reporting now. There have been some gains but more losses — more arts coverage from Colorado Public Radio and RMPBS, much less from TV. In fact, there’s no regular, fulltime arts reporter at any major local TV affiliate. They didn’t put in a plug for more and better arts criticism on TV, but we can.

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