Matt Ozug
Stories
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How do producers shape the stories you hear?
NPR's Jonaki Mehta and Matt Ozug talk about what producers actually do on the radio and how they shape the news listeners hear every day.
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How volunteering led one woman to lifelong friendships and a chicken tattoo
This week Here to Help, our series on volunteerism, travels to New York for a story of close friendships that formed while caring for school yard chickens.
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The author of 'We Were Liars' on her passionate readers' 'big reactions' to her work
We speak to E. Lockhart, author of the best-selling novel We Were Liars, about her new book, We Fell Apart.
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How an Oregon writer finds fulfillment in picking up litter
Three years ago, Mark Remy decided he was fed up with the litter in his city. So, he started to do something about it and learned even small acts of service can have a real impact.
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Remembering Ashleigh Brilliant, a man of 10,000 witticisms
Ashleigh Brilliant has died. He was known for thousands of one-liners — witty statements or epigrams that he licensed and marketed as "pot-shots." He was 91.
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'All Things Considered' bids farewell to host Ari Shapiro
All Things Considered is saying goodbye to Ari Shapiro, whose hosts his final show today following 10 years with the program and more than 25 with NPR.
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Jeff Tweedy on 'Twilight Override,' his new triple album
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Wilco front man Jeff Tweedy about his new triple solo album, Twilight Override, which examines the pandemic-related trauma he says we're all still dealing with.
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An Ohio tattoo artist has been turning traumatic scars into works of art for a decade
We revisit a tattoo artist who has been helping people cover scars from traumatic events for ten years.
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The inspiration behind soccer commentator Ray Hudson's creative superlatives
Soccer commentator Ray Hudson on retiring from the microphone and what inspired his decades of trademark exclamations
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Author Angela Flournoy explores 20 years of adult friendship in 'The Wilderness'
NPR's Juana Summers talks to author Angela Flournoy about how millennial friendships evolve in middle age as explored in her new novel, "The Wilderness."