Tim, K0RUS, in Colorado, produced this YouTube video of his reception and decoding of VOA Radiogram, 21 September 2013, 1600-1630 UTC, on 17860 kHz. The audio drops out about nine minutes in, but the video continues until the end of the half-hour program.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=3nwlrNCiJBo
Mark in UK produced this YouTube video of his decoding of the same broadcasting, using a venerable but great looking Sony ICF-6700L receiver:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=PfWz0h_Mcfg
Andy in northern Virginia provides this YouTube video of reception on 22 September 2013 at 1300-1330 UTC on 6095 kHz. Propagation between North Carolina and northern Virginia is usually very good at 1300 UTC on 6095 kHz, so the signal was big, and the decode flawless:
For the second weekend in a row, Takeshi-san in Shimane Prefecture, Japan, received and decoded VOA Radiogram. This time he was tuned to 15670 kHz, at 1930-2000 UTC on 22 september 2013. The distance from the North Carolina transmitter is 11,000 km, or 29,000 km if it was (more likely) via the long path:
Jay in Ontario recorded an excerpt of the same 1930-2000 UTC broadcast. He was using the DM780 decoding software that comes with Ham radio Deluxe:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4S2dbDUyHY