Marian Navarro
Producer for Morning Edition and Fronterasmarian@tpr.org
(210) 614-8977 x404
Marian Navarro produces for Texas Public Radio's Morning Edition and Fronteras.
She interned with the Voces Oral History Center, where she wrote and narrated a series of audio pieces highlighting notable Latinos for Hispanic Heritage Month in collaboration with Austin's NPR station KUT. She also worked as a reporter and producer on season 3 of Darkness, a true crime podcast for UT Austin's audio production house, The Drag.
She is a life-long San Antonian and is a recent journalism graduate from The University of Texas at Austin's School of Journalism.
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Jennifer Dobbertin was one of three chefs selected by the fast food giant to put her take on the iconic Crunchwrap Supreme. She discussed her involvement in the company's inaugural program and her cultural influences.
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Cuidad Juárez — a sister city to El Paso, Texas — had once been dubbed the "murder capital of the world." Anthropologist Howard Campbell breaks down the complex causes of the violence in the book "Downtown Juárez: Underworlds of Violence & Abuse."
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Legisladores del Valle del Río Grande piden al Departamento de Estado aplicar el tratado de agua con México.
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The state's last remaining sugar mill announced its closure last month following ongoing water supply issues with Mexico. Valley representatives Vicente Gonzalez and Monica De La Cruz both said the U.S. State Department has failed to hold Mexico accountable.
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The Jan. 24 panel discussion used the reissue of the book "West of the Creek: Murder, Mayhem and Vice in Old San Antonio" as a launching point for a broader conversation about the importance — and misconceptions — of San Antonio's historic West Side.
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San Antonio residents can attend in-person comment sessions or leave a comment online or by phone about five proposed changes to the city charter.
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Estudiante de San Antonio coronada ganadora del Kid Baking Championship del Food Network.
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NEISD seventh grader Lila Smethurst won the competition Monday night with her chocolate volcano came. She takes home the $25,000 prize and a feature in Food Network Magazine.
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Rio Grande Valley Sugar Growers, Inc. has operated out of the RGV for more than 50 years. It announced its recently completed harvest and milling season would be its last because of water shortages.
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Texas Public Radio and Trinity University Press hosted a book club discussion on the reissue of "West of the Creek: Murder, Mayhem and Vice in Old San Antonio." Local activists, historians, and writers used the book as a launching point to a broader conversation about the significance of San Antonio's West Side.