Reading for the Blind
Visually impaired subscribers to recorded periodicals peruse everything from Forbes to Skeptical Inquirer
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, June 1998, Subscribe
No one in the world knows Smithsonian Magazine better than Joseph J. Gebhardt. He reads practically every word of every issue, from the table of contents to the last gasp of the final essay. Aloud.
Gebhardt is a volunteer reader for Associated Services for the Blind (ASB), based in Philadelphia. It takes him from seven to ten hours to get through an issue, leaving out the ads and additional reading citations but including everything else, even the captions on the pictures, which he describes.
"I begin cold," he tells me. "It's more spontaneous if I don't rehearse."
This is not easy, as anyone who has listened to a TV newscaster lurching through the sentences on a TelePrompTer will tell you. "It's an eye-mouth connection, the eye goes ahead to see where the sentence is going. I make a few spoonerisms, but sometimes I can read a whole page without a mistake."
He omits nothing, but he adds nothing, either, unless it is to explain some technical point in a "reader's note." A dictionary lies on his desk to help with pronunciation.
"We have sources for foreign words, at colleges and so on," he says, "but even those sources don't always know. One article had a bunch of Gaelic words, all those consonants, and the sources couldn't help me, so finally I found an Irish newspaper and I got the editor and had this really delightful conversation with her. Nowadays we're more apt to get into Chinese or Thai, though."
He likes remaining a more or less anonymous conduit. It's not his show, he says. Once in a while he will laugh out loud, though. There was a piece on the Old West where a cowboy goes into a saloon and orders beer and cheese. He tells the bartender the cheese is no good, he can't smell a thing. The bartender says, "Well, take yer feet off the table and give the cheese a chance."
Gebhardt left that laugh in. More often than not he edits out his involuntary additions. "I try not to comment in any way," he tells me. He has been known to break into a New York Jewish accent, however, when appropriate for a humorous piece.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (2)
My dad did field tests for the Franklin Institute's Electronic Cane. He had mentioned Tom Benham. Was Mr. Benham involved in that study or was he strictly involved with ASB? Dad was also the secretary for the Philadelphia Lighthouse of the Blind when it was near Germantown and Lehigh, I think it on the northwest corner of 11th and Lehigh, from what I remember. I was pretty young when we went there.
Posted by bill meecham on September 25,2011 | 08:54 PM
My name is Joe Gebhardt and I was a reader for the blind, too, for a number of years. Imagine that--another Joe Gebhardt. My organization was named, "Second Sight" and was located in Stuart, Florida. I was just checking my name on Google and found this item. Surprise.
Posted by Joe Gebhardt on April 2,2009 | 03:41 PM