Bronson Arcuri
Bronson Arcuri is an award-winning video producer and multimedia journalist. He is currently an editor and managing producer on the NPR video team. In addition to overseeing NPR's video coverage of the ongoing war in Ukraine, he also manages short-form video production for All Things Considered, Life Kit and NPR's international reporting and political coverage. He is also part of the leadership team developing news products for emerging platforms, including Instagram and TikTok.
In addition to his video work, Arcuri is a managing producer on the Life Kit podcast.
He was also the creator and director of the economics explainer video series Planet Money Shorts, as well as the politics explainer series Ron's Office Hours. He previously served as director for the award-winning Tiny Desk Concert series.
He got his start at member station WOUB in Athens, Ohio. He also worked as a production assistant on the show "Gossip Girl" during his first summer after college.
His work has won numerous awards from the The White House News Photographers' Association, the Webbys and the Telly Awards, to name a few. His films have also been screened at multiple film festivals and have been listed as Vimeo Staff Picks.
Arcuri graduated from Scripps College of Communication at Ohio University and currently lives with his family in Washington, D.C.
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Federal agencies say a life is worth $10 million. This is the story of how they got that number.
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The way Illinois finally got the masks it needed was practically the plot to a heist thriller — so we turned it into one for the first of our Quarantine Edition of Planet Money Shorts.
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The Federal Reserve is designed to deal with financial panics because it was created by one.
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Seven of the 10 most profitable films of all time are horror movies, and the reason why is quite simple.
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In the early 1600s there was one stock market with only one company's stock in it, and it didn't take long before someone tried to manipulate the price.
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Here's what Kazakhstan, Hong Kong and Ireland have in common: They all have Irish pubs. And a bunch of them are the product of one man: Mel McNally.
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Buying a lottery ticket is a bad deal. The odds are against you, even with a giant pot. But one guy figured out how to flip the odds in his favor ... 14 times.
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The government manages a lot of things: air and water quality, roads and bridges, and, once upon a time, a whole lot of cheese.
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This is the story of how plastic was invented, and how maybe we went too far with it.
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To us non-babies, babbles like "ah-gah" and "dadadadada" can sound like cute gobbledygook. But they don't have to be such a mystery. We'll get a primer on how to decipher the dialect of tiny humans.