Radio & Podcasts
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New Hampshire Public Radio
Some Latinos Are Excited To Vote In The Midterms, But Information in Spanish Is Tough / Latinos Quieren Votar Pero Encontrar Informacion Correcta, Y En Español, Es Dificil
We also translated our English voter guide into Spanish as a result of this reporting.
Republicans, Democrats Want To See A Younger State House Next Session
Department Of Education Offers Cultural Competency Training For New Hampshire Schools
This is the last story on our series examining how race affects students. This is the first year NH’s DOE has had this kind of training available for schools.
How Two Friends Navigate Being Young Black Men In A Mostly White New Hampshire Town
This story is part of a series that examines how race affects students. Check out the rest of the series here and here.
Border/State
For NHPR's Word of Mouth, I interviewed my dad about Colombia, our love of soccer, and ultimately our family. (Shoutout to Jimmy for letting us on the show!)
Granite Staters Follow Home Countries This World Cup
I talked with Colombians at a Colombian bakery in Nashua about what it means to them to have that space to watch their home country from so many miles away.
North Conway Students (& Graduates) Keep Parkland-Inspired Political Momentum Rolling
NPR's Planet Money
Episode 765: The Holiday Industrial Complex
I produced this podcast at the end of my Spring 2017 internship. I worked with Kenny Malone to do pre-reporting and research. I also tracked Kenny in the studio, and learned about some wonky holidays in the process.
Episode 755: The Phone At The End Of The World
I made a lot of calls to Tierra del Fuego, Argentina for this show. After days of calling, I finally got us in touch with someone who could walk us through what it was like when Blackberry set up production at, what some call, the end of the world.
Episode 513: Dear Economist, I Need A Date
This is an updated re-run. I picked the music, wrote the transitions with the help of Sally Helm, and then produced the last couple of minutes of the show.
KBIA FM, Columbia, Missouri
Talking Politics
I produced this weekly segment on local and state politics throughout the fall of 2016. I edited reporters' scripts and worked with them on developing interview questions. On election night, I worked with KBIA's news director and a political science professor to offer live commentary on election results.
Educating A County On Lead Risks
I reported this story as part of a series KBIA did on lead in Herculaneum, Missouri, a former lead mining town. I wanted to answer the question, how do people learn about lead risks?
Growing Latino Population Brings Changes In Small Town Mid-Missouri
I happened upon this story when I noticed a small yellow sign that read “Mandamos dinero a Mexico aqui.” Since 2000, the Latino population in Mexico, Mo., rose 256 percent, and the town is changing because of that.
Mothers Exchanging Breastmilk Online in Columbia
I worked with a team of two other journalists to find women who exchanged breastmilk via a Facebook page.
Migrant Farmworkers Find Healthcare in Western Missouri
I’ve loved using my Spanish to find stories we might not hear otherwise. I learned more about the migrant farmers who pick apples in Missouri and the kind of health services they can access.
Investigative Reporters & Editors
America's Exploited Guest Workers
On this episode, Ken Bensinger and Jessica Garrison take us through their BuzzFeed News investigation into H-2 visas, a program that condemns thousands of workers to abuse and exploitation.
Life and Death in Lowell
On this episode, Miami Herald reporter Julie Brown discusses her year-long investigation into Lowell, the nation's largest women's prison. She exposed a world of sexual extortion, abuse and corruption inside the Florida prison.
The Disappeared/Los Desaparecidos
We talked with Daniela Guazo from Mexico’s El Universal about the work she and her team did along with Colombia’s El Tiempo to give a human face to an issue that has affected nearly 100,000 families. This was our first-ever Spanish podcast.
Regulated by God
Reveal reporter Amy Julia Harris discusses what she found when she began investigating the exemptions granted to faith-based day cares. In a handful of states, religious day cares are free from government regulation, a fact some parents learned the hard way.