October • 2017
Devin was great! Good communication and very detailed oriented. Would definitely hire again.
Los Angeles, CA, USA
3 reviews$450 - $1000 / Day
Request QuoteHaving worked with distinguished news organizations including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, NPR, MarketWatch, PBS, PRX, Public Radio International, and American Public Media, I have considerable experience producing dynamic audio stories that reach a large audience and illustrate diverse subjects through engaging narratives. Fluent in all aspects of production: digital, audio & video. Earned a degree in Journalism & Communications from San Diego State University and completed graduate fellowship programs at the University of Southern California, the University of California at Berkeley and Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. As a lifelong animal advocate, I lend my support to rescue, rehabilitate and re-home abandoned cats and dogs. You can also find me on my bike, cycling from San Francisco to Los Angeles to raise money for HIV/AIDS services for the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center.
October • 2017
Devin was great! Good communication and very detailed oriented. Would definitely hire again.
September • 2017
Great working with Devin! She's professional in every way, and has great energy and ideas!
January • 2018
Did a great job, recorded the assignment in the field with the team and delivered the raw files to the team in the field as asked. Then went a step beyond to mix the audio down to stereo and label the files which she sent via email along with boosting some of the sound due to the wind noise (lower recording). Very communicative and easy to book and work with. Would recommend!
Back in 2003, Secretary of State Colin Powell gave his memorable speech at the UN Security Council on the now-discredited notion of Saddam Hussein having weapons of mass destruction. Lawrence Wilkerson, Powell’s then-Chief of Staff, talks about what went into the speech and reveals that even as it was being given, Powell and he both had serious doubts about its veracity.
Host Farai Chideya talks with actor Delroy Lindo, who's played everything from a gangster in Spike Lee's "Malcolm X" to an animated character in the Disney film, "Up." In 2014, he completed a masters degree thesis on the Windrush generation -- post-WWII Jamaican immigrants to England, including his mother.
Host Farai Chideya talks with actor Wendell Pierce (Treme, The Wire), who co-founded a chain of grocery stores in urban "food deserts." Pierce, a New Orleans native, speaks passionately about the joys, jazz and struggles of his city.
Host Farai Chideya speaks with 95-year-old National Parks ranger Betty Reid Soskin. She has worked for women's and civil rights; run a "race record" music store; and now helps tell the history of gender and industry at the Rosie the Riveter/ World War II Home Front National Historical Park. With sharp honesty, she details how America has changed -- and failed to -- during her lifetime.
Host Farai Chideya talks with financier Mellody Hobson about how being a black woman has informed her work; board diversity; and family. Mellody Hobson is President of Ariel Investments, one of the largest African American-owned money management and mutual fund companies in the U.S. She's also Chairman of the Board for Dreamworks Animation, as well as a Director of the Starbucks Corportion.
Farai Chideya talks with writer and former MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry about her book "Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America" the political and personal lives of black women, and motherhood via surrogacy.
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