Jenny Lawton
A proud native of the Second City, producer Jenny Lawton joined Studio 360 in 2007. Since then, she's produced the show's American Icons special on I Love Lucy, lots of stories in the Aha Moments series, and a portrait of the Japanese tea ceremony from Kyoto. She also serves as the managing editor of studio360.org and coordinates the show's internship program. Jenny started recording interviews as a Watson Fellow in India and Spain, researching the origins of flamenco dance. She cut her teeth in journalism at Chicago Public Radio, where she filed stories on culture, politics, technology, and the environment for WBEZ as well as NPR's Morning Edition and PRI's The World, among other programs. Jenny was awarded a USC-Annenberg/NEA Arts Journalism Fellowship, and lectures about radio and sound design at NYU and her alma mater, Kenyon College.









Comments [6]
I agree with you Elly. Its good there are films on subjects that are not bought and paid for by Hollywood. You get to see the unaltered truth of a subject, not americanised how -we-are-best-at-everything sentiment. Not that I am against America, just the obvious propaganda crap that they can churn out...oops was getting on my soap box sorry!
Thanks for the post 360
wOw. a really great post you have here. keep up a good job. thanks for sharing.
Some of the bets films are world cinema. Its great that the low key, low budget films get some recognition. There is a stage where you get sick of all the hollywood hype over a stinking flop of a film.
My 2c :)
Regards,
Elly
Ultimate Bet Rakeback
Wow, the rail road on desert.. cool.
I am setting up a Blog like this one for my knew job as an art school , Otis College of Art and Design, Alumni Advocate. I am
wondering how many people or how few people work on updating this Blog.
Thanks, I am a huge fan of the cross cultural reporting. As an artist foremost is is just darn great dialogue in the studio.
Best,
Ceres Madoo
good to small budget movies getting noticed, hurt locker and precious. bravo.
Leave a Comment
Register for your own account so you can vote on comments, save your favorites, and more. Learn more.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. We reserve the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting. By leaving a comment, you agree to New York Public Radio's Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use.