Adriana Gallardo
Adriana Gallardo is an American journalist, editor, and educator who serves as an editor for NPR's Morning Edition, focusing on books and author interviews.[1] Early lifeGallardo was born in central Mexico and immigrated to the United States as an undocumented child in the late 1980s. She grew up in the Chicago suburbs in a family of janitors.[2] CareerProPublicaGallardo joined ProPublica in 2016 as an engagement reporter. During her seven-year tenure, she collaborated on investigative series covering women's health, immigration, and sexual violence.[3] Her notable projects included:
Innovative Reporting MethodsAt ProPublica, Gallardo developed innovative community engagement methods. During the "Lost Mothers" series, she pioneered a unique approach to gathering stories about black maternal mortality, drawing from her experience at StoryCorps to record conversations between women about their experiences.[4] Public RadioBefore ProPublica, Gallardo oversaw a national reporting series at 15 public media stations and traveled with the StoryCorps mobile booth, collecting hundreds of stories archived at the Library of Congress.[3] She currently serves as an editor for NPR's Morning Edition, the most listened-to news radio program in the United States.[1] TeachingGallardo teaches at the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma and serves as an adjunct professor at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at City University of New York.[5] WritingGallardo is an essayist represented by the Stuart Krichevsky Literary Agency. Her work has appeared in Guernica, Catapult, and in Daughters of Latin America, a 2023 anthology available in English and Spanish.[1] Awards and recognition
References
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