• BONUS: Introducing Alexis Derickson as host
    May 10 2024

    In this season 16 bonus episode, outgoing host Jacqueline GaNun passes the mic to Alexis Derickson. Alexis tells us how she plans to use her previous journalism experience and what she hopes to learn — and bring to listeners — as host of The Lead.

    Show more Show less
    14 mins
  • Alex Crevar on finding a travel journalism niche
    Apr 10 2024

    Alex Crevar moved to the Balkans in the 1990s and has been reporting from there ever since. His vivid and insightful travel stories are published in outlets including The New York Times, National Geographic and Lonely Planet, but his focus isn’t on filling a résumé — it’s about traveling genuinely and responsibly.

    In this episode, Alex recalls how he fell into travel writing and why he’s been doing it for more than 30 years. As a cyclist and hiker, his hobbies also inform his adventure journalism, and he talks about his role in creating the Via Dinarica hiking trail and Trans Dinarica cycle route across the Balkans in Southeastern Europe.

    Guest: Alex Crevar, freelance travel journalist.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    22 mins
  • Scripps News’ Alexandra Travis on telling Black stories on screen
    Mar 27 2024

    Alexandra Travis works to tell stories that have gone uncovered. As a documentary producer at Scripps News, she creates long-form, in-depth video journalism focusing especially on the experiences of Black people in the South.

    In this episode, Alexandra talks about what it feels like when she realizes there’s a story she can tell using video, why focusing on Black stories is important to her and how her documentaries connect with audiences. You can watch her award-winning documentary “Ropes in Brown Hands,” which is about an Oklahoma town that’s home to one of the nation’s oldest Black rodeos, here.

    Guest: Alexandra Travis, documentary producer at Scripps News.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    20 mins
  • WRAL’s Kelsey Coffey on knowing what drives you
    Mar 13 2024

    Kelsey Coffey gets up at 2:30 a.m. every day to deliver the morning news as a broadcast reporter at WRAL in Raleigh, North Carolina. She graduated from the University of Georgia in 2020 into uncertainty from the pandemic and protests for racial justice across the country. But today, she knows what drives her to wake up early each morning — connecting with her audience and serving them through her reporting.

    In this episode, Kelsey talks about the projects she’s worked on with Charlayne Hunter-Gault, a phenomenal journalist and one of two students who desegregated UGA in 1961, and about why it’s important to know your “why.”

    Guest: Kelsey Coffey, reporter at WRAL.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    22 mins
  • UGA’s Dodie Cantrell-Bickley on the bright future of broadcast journalism
    Feb 28 2024

    Dodie Cantrell-Bickley was taught the importance of a free press from her mother, who grew up in Nazi Germany and saw how crucial journalism was. Dodie pursued that passion for more than 30 years as a broadcast reporter and president of multiple news stations. She was a leader during the pivot to digital and the advent of the internet, and she’s always looking forward to what’s next.

    In this episode, we talk about leading through change, encouraging innovation and staying powerfully optimistic about the future of journalism.

    Guest: Dodie Cantrell-Bickley, senior lecturer in journalism at the University of Georgia.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    22 mins
  • The Atlanta Business Chronicle’s Savannah Sicurella and Tyler Wilkins on starting out in business journalism
    Feb 14 2024

    Savannah Sicurella and Tyler Wilkins are making careers in business journalism soon after graduating college and entering the job market. In this episode, they debrief about what drew them to reporting on commercial real estate and development, and how they managed to navigate the learning curve that comes with starting a new role — especially a business-focused one.

    Check out Savannah’s reporting here and Tyler’s reporting here.

    Guests: Savannah Sicurella and Tyler Wilkins, staff reporters at the Atlanta Business Chronicle.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    18 mins
  • The Current’s Margaret Coker on reviving an investigative news desert
    Jan 31 2024

    Margaret Coker has covered stories from 32 countries on four continents, working for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and other outlets. In 2020, she returned home to Savannah, Georgia, to found The Current, a nonprofit news source dedicated to filling the vacuum of high-quality investigative news on the coast.

    In this episode, we chat about her international reporting, founding a news start-up and why nonprofit news is increasingly important.

    Check out Margaret’s book, “The Spymaster of Baghdad,” here. You can read some of her reporting in The Current about the murder of Ahmaud Arbery and racism in the Glynn County police force.

    “High quality facts, high quality information, high quality local news should be a public good and not a for-profit commodity. That is at the essence why nonprofit news matters.”

    Guest: Margaret Coker, editor-in-chief of The Current.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    21 mins
  • Special: What the Hackathon, featuring Adam Levin
    Nov 15 2023

    Misinformation. Deepfakes. Scams. None of these are going away, and we need tools to figure out what’s true. This special episode of The Lead brings you into the What the Hackathon at the University of Georgia, where students learned in real-time how to navigate our disordered information ecosystem to produce and consume news responsibly.

    It also features an interview with Adam Levin, a sponsor of the Hackathon and host of the What the Hack podcast, a no-shame zone for anyone who’s ever been scammed, hacked, phished or cyber-bushwhacked. Adam and I talk about how it’s more important than ever to combat misinformation as our democracy and society is impacted.

    Listen to Adam on What the Hack here or any platform where you listen to podcasts.

    “Never lose your curiosity and don’t be complacent. When it comes to receiving what is presented to you as news, always ask questions.”

    Guest: Adam Levin, host of What the Hack.

    Host: Jacqueline GaNun.

    Show more Show less
    17 mins