The Joe Show must go on, but new camera operator needed to make it happen

WKTV volunteer Joe DeJong has been the host of The Joe Show for the past three years. He is now looking for an assistant to help operate the camera and edit his show. (WKTV)

Editor’s Note: This story ran previously. The current producer needed to step away with The Joe Show now searching for a new camera operator/producer. If you are interested, contact WKTV Managing Editor Joanne Bailey-Boorsma at joanne@wktv.org or call the office 616-261-5700.

By Sheila McGrath
WKTV Contributing Writer


Joe DeJong is not a guy who gives up easily.

For the past three years, DeJong has hosted a podcast called The Joe Show – Connecting All Abilities, which airs on WKTV and can also be found on Apple Podcasts and WKTV’s The Whole Picture Podcasts Facebook page.

The podcast discusses many issues around living with a disability, including ways the community can be more inclusive, as well as the dreams, needs and goals of people with disabilities.

But DeJong, who is blind, has been unable to produce new episodes of the show for the past few months because he lost his camera operator.

Joe DeJong with Erin App, the choir director for the Action Choir. (WKTV)

Now, he’s looking for a new camera person who can also provide transportation to the WKTV studio in Wyoming and help him line up guests.

“I can’t run the cameras because of my visual impairment. I can’t do it myself,” he said. “It’s disappointing to me to not be doing the show right now, but I’m a very patient person. I’m willing to wait until I can get somebody.”

DeJong, 28, has hosted 40 episodes of The Joe Show, featuring guests from the Special Olympics, the Kentwood Parks and Recreation Department, Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Center, Disability Advocates of Kent County and many more. State Rep. Tommy Brann was a guest on one of his early podcasts in 2020.

DeJong has many ideas for where he’d like to take the show, but first, he needs to find someone to help run the camera.

Hiring the new person would be facilitated through GT Independence, a service that helps people with disabilities hire community-based caregivers of their choosing.

In addition to running the camera and providing transportation to and from the studio, DeJong envisions that the new assistant would also help him narrow down possible guests for the show by researching people and businesses that would be a good fit. DeJong would make the phone calls to book the guests, he said.

The time commitment would be a few hours a week, including driving to and from the studio, setting up and taping the half-hour show, and doing a little additional research to find guests.

Joe DeJong said he hopes to keep his show about abilities running but needs an assistance to do so. (WKTV)

“If we can find someone, then we can go from there, and give them the training on how to work the camera,” he said.

“I’m a guy that’s going to keep punching and keep advocating and keep fighting,” he said. “I’m not quitting.”

Anyone interested in working with DeJong on the show may contact him through WKTV at 616-261-5700 or by emailing WKTV Managing Editor, Joanne Bailey-Boorsma at joanne@wktv.org.

More information about GT Independence is online at gtindependence.com, or they can be reached by phone at 1-877-659-4500.  

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