Mallory Cheng
Mallory Cheng was a Lake Effect producer from 2021 to 2023.
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The Milwaukee County Transit System (MCTS)may seem like an unlikely place to find love, but for these couples, their relationships grew along the route. We’ll hear from two couples: one pair worked as drivers at MCTS and the other met as passengers.
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Lindsey Saint Arnold Bell, interim executive director at Near West Side Partners, discusses the organization's mission to encourage Milwaukee drivers to slow down.
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Tony Giron is the co-author of a study. He along with two UW-Milwaukee researchers, Xiaohan Gu and Robert Schneider, found that most drivers causing auto-pedestrian accidents are not from the city. Giron explains more.
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Dr. Jake Behrens, founder and psychiatrist at Envision ADHD in Mequon, offers further insight into ADHD and alternative treatments amidst the Adderall shortage.
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Milwaukee Public Library's Brittany Lee shares her book recommendation and some programs offered by the library for Black History Month.
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Dinorah Márquez, director of the Latino Arts Strings program, and Gohar Vardanyan, an acclaimed classical guitarist and headliner at the event, talk about the tenth annual festival.
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MAdre Wellness Collective is removing barriers to wellness for people of color in Milwaukee. Maricella Nayeri is the owner; she talks about her own healing journey and how the collective hopes to make wellness more accessible.
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You may have heard the name, Ruby Bridges, who at the age of six desegregated an all-white elementary school. But there were three other girls who had the same experience. For this edition of Monthly with Mosley, we dive into the forgotten histories of Gail Etienne, Tessie Prevost, and Leona Tate, who along with Ruby Bridges, desegregated their schools.
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Keri Blakinger, an investigative reporter who worked on this study of banned books in U.S. prisons for The Marshall Project, shares her findings and answers if these books should be allowed in prison.
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True crime podcasts, television and streaming series are extremely popular and the genre continues to grow. But why is it so popular? Is it problematic to be a fan?