
Maureen Harvie
Senior Supervising Producer, On The RecordMaureen Harvie is Senior Supervising Producer for On the Record. She is a graduate of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and joined WYPR in 2014 as an intern for the newsroom. Whether coordinating live election night coverage, capturing the sounds of a roller derby scrimmage, interviewing veterans, or booking local authors, she is always on the lookout for the next story.
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Mindfulness and meditation are not the first image most outsiders carry of Baltimore public schools. But three Baltimore men have taken their practice of mindfulness deep into dozens of city schools, and changed lives. Their new book is: “Let Your Light Shine.”
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Hearing aids are now available to purchase without a doctor’s visit. Who is best suited for an over-the-counter hearing aid? And will a broader market lead to lower costs? Plus, the potential of magic mushrooms to lift stubborn depression. We get a health innovation check-up!
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Beth Frederick shares a Stoop story about her Christmas-crazed family.
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We’ll go On the Record with musician Stephen Philip Harvey. Even with three teaching gigs, Harvey found time to write a new album, extolling superheroes he’d watched on Saturday morning cartoons. How did he translate brooding heroes and villains into jazz?
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We’ll go On the Record with April Ryan, to hear about her new book Black Women Will Save the World. For most of the decades Ryan has covered presidents, no other Black women were in the press room. She writes about pressures on Black women and their superpowers.
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We hear about two projects to boost the confidence of young people in Baltimore. The outdoor education program ‘Fernway Outdoors,’ will offer field trips and teach wilderness skills. And the group ‘Gentleman’s Graffiti’ will create a safe space for young men to express themselves through art.
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This week on the podcast, two stories about forgiveness and connection during the festival of lights.
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We’ll go On the Record to look at the decline in U.S. life expectancy. COVID, overdoses, and other threats pulled the years we can expect to live from a peak of nearly 79 in 2014 -- to 76 years. How to reverse the trend?
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We’ll go On the Record with two book connoisseurs. A Baltimore County librarian recommends new titles for kids of all ages, from graphic novels to poetry. And Carla Du Pree of CityLit Project shares ideas in nonfiction, short stories, and self-help.
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We’ll go On the Record to hear how One Love Foundation educates teens to avoid dangerous relationships, and to learn about the House of Ruth’s Gateway Project: It helps people who are in cycles of inflicting abuse choose a different way.