
Paige Phelps
Paige Phelps was a senior producer for KJZZ's The Show from 2017 to 2019.
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The music created behind the Iron Curtain was just as fraught, or so says Peter Schmelz, Arizona State University associate professor of musicology. He’s been awarded 2019 Guggenheim Fellowship to further this research.
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When Flagstaff-native Erin Callinan was 17, she had her first “breakdown” — a manic episode that led to hospitalization — something that would happen twice in her young life. In her autobiography, “Beautifully Bipolar,” she tried to describe her mania.
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Henry Barajas, is a former journalist in Tucson, was gifted his great-grandfather’s documents. Barajas turned his family’s history into a comic book series he calls "La Voz de M.A.Y.O.: Tata Rambo."
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While Arizona doesn’t maintain a record of how many minorities are in the design profession here, nationally we know that out of over 100,000 registered architects — less than 2 percent — are African-American.
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ASU announced a major partnership between the university and the world-renown artist James Turrell that involves a very unique, off-campus experience.
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What happens when a writer from New Mexico, who’s taught poetry in Arizona, and is now living in the deep South explores the people and places of the Wild West?
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As schools tested toward Arizona’s “College and Career Ready Standards” in reading and math, there were a few bright spots in the AzMERIT scores, including Tucson Unified School District.
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As part of our ongoing series exploring the memories, emotions and perspectives the monsoon invokes in Arizonans, we hear from Ty Karlovetz, a park ranger at Grand Canyon National Park.
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In May, the inaugural Phoenix Mural Festival transformed monochrome neighborhood walls into multi-colored landscapes. But not everyone living in the area welcomed the fresh paint. The festival organizers paired homeowners with local artists to paint murals on their front or backyard walls.
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Which came first; a teenager nose-deep in a smartphone or the ADHD diagnosis? It’s the modern-day version of the chicken and the egg — and it’s the reason researchers at the University of Southern California studied over 2,000 teenagers for two years.