The Talk Radio News Service

The Talk Radio News Service is the only information news service dedicated to serving the talk radio community. TRNS maintains a Washington office that includes White House, Capitol Hill and Pentagon staffed bureaus, and a New York office with a United Nations staffed bureau.

General Services


General Services

The Talk Radio News Service is the ONLY information, news, booking and host service dedicated to serving the talk radio community with a Washington office that includes the White House, Capitol Hill and Pentagon staffed bureaus. Talk Radio News Service has permanent access to every breaking news event in the Washington, DC area and beyond.

Talk Radio News Service can offer live drop-ins and news reports to talk programs with political, government and world news from the nation’s capital. We also offer talk radio program booking services on hot topics inside and outside of the Beltway.

In addition to our news gathering and booking services, Talk Radio News Services offers one of the most comprehensive college internship programs in Washington for students interested in journalism and/or the political process.

Contact us for more information on the services provided by the Talk Radio News Service.

Internship Information

Please visit our Intern Page for more information.

WARNING: You’re about to learn about one of the most exciting and fulfilling internships opportunities in Washington, D.C.

An internship at the Talk Radio News Service is a hands-on experience, where interns are treated as staff members. It is an opportunity to learn reporting, writing and digital editing for live on-air radio work. This internship involves quite a bit of work, but you will leave with examples of your on-air and written work.

Interns at Talk Radio News Service participate in the following activities and tasks:

  • Broadcasting news daily to the College Media News stations and on the Talk Radio News Service website. This includes gathering, writing and researching news stories as well as interviews of interest to college students.
  • Attending news briefings and press conferences, including attending White House press briefings, hearings on Capitol Hill and other newsworthy events around Washington, D.C.
  • Gathering and writing news for broadcast on the Talk Radio News Service distribution network.
    The Talk Radio News Service Internship is an excellent way to get a foot in the door in Washington, gain tremendous real-world media experience and to discover how political life ‘Inside the Beltway’ is really lived.

For more information, contact us via email or via telephone at (202) 337-5322.

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Comment Policy: We'd like the posts to be civil, of course (no profanity, personal insults, and the like), but we're also hoping that people try to be as calm, reasoned, and substantive as possible. So please, also avoid rants, invective, substantial and repeated exaggeration, and radical departures from the topic of the thread. Sticking with substance -- and staying on-topic -- will make the comments more helpful to other readers, and more pleasant.

As editors, we reserve the right to delete posts, and even to kick out posters, though we hope that both of these will be exceptional events. (We also reserve the right to be busy with other things, and therefore (1) not remove all the posts that might merit removal, and (2) ignore demands such as "You should remove A's posts, because they're just as bad as B's!")

Here's a tip: Reread your post, and think of what people would think if you said this over dinner. If you think people would view you as a crank, a blowhard, or as someone who vastly overdoes it on the hyperbole, rewrite your post before hitting enter.

And if you think this is the other people's fault -- you're one of the few who sees the world clearly, but fools wrongly view you as a crank, a blowhard, or as someone who overdoes it on the hyperbole -- then you should still rewrite your post before hitting enter. After all, if you're one of the few who sees the world clearly, then surely it's especially important that you frame your arguments in a way that is persuasive and as unalienating as possible, even to fools.

Our goal is to provide an interesting and pleasant environment that can help inform readers. To do that, we'll occasionally have to exercise our editorial discretion. Think of this as an in-person discussion group, where having different voices is critical to a great conversation -- but where sometimes the leader has to deal with cranks who sour the conversation more than they enliven it.

Naturally, there's always a risk that this discretion will be used erroneously, no matter how well-intentioned the editor. But discussion groups (especially on the Internet, but also off it) generally need an editor who'll occasionally make such judgments.

And, remember, it's a big Internet. If you think we were mistaken in removing your post (or, in extreme cases, in removing you) -- or if you prefer a more free-for-all approach -- there are surely plenty of ways you can still get your views out.