Renee Wilde
Community Voices ProducerRenee Wilde was part of the 2013 Community Voices class, allowing her to combine a passion for storytelling and love of public radio. She started out as a volunteer at the radio station, creating the weekly WYSO Community Calendar and co-producing Women’s Voices from the Dayton Correctional Institution - winner of the 2017 PRINDI award for best long-form documentary. She also had the top two highest ranked stories on the WYSO website in one year with Why So Curious features. Renee produced WYSO’s series County Lines which takes listeners down back roads and into small towns throughout southwestern Ohio, and created Agraria’s Grounded Hope podcast exploring the past, present and future of agriculture in Ohio through a regenerative lens. Her stories have been featured on NPR, Harvest Public Media and Indiana Public Radio.
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The newly opened Roger Glass Center for The Arts at the University of Dayton has begun holding classes for students.
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The Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association is kicking off its 2024 Film Series on food policy in Dayton. A free screening of the 2014 movie ‘Food Chains’ by director Sanjay Rawal will be held on Sunday (January 14) at the Neon Theater in Dayton.
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Everyday People is WYSO’s series that shines a light on the jobs, and people who do them, that touch our lives in ways that we don’t always understand or appreciate. In this episode Renee Wilde rides along with a zoning and code inspector for Centerville, a suburb of Dayton, Ohio.
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Montgomery County Job and Family Services wants to raise local awareness about the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credits.
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Renee Wilde travels to Dayton to meet a butcher who is working to create a sustainable food system, that in turn, will support a sustainable community - one customer at a time.
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Wright State University and Premier Health say their partnership will improve the health of Dayton, Ohio, region residents and the academic programs at the Boonshoft School of Medicine.
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State Route 571 has been designated the least traveled road in Ohio by Geotab using data from the government’s Highway Performance Monitoring System. In this second part of this two-part story on the loneliest road in Ohio, Renee Wilde picks up the story in the former prairie land around West Milton, and ends up at the Ohio border in Union City.
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Ride with Renee Wilde as she takes a data-driven road trip along Ohio's loneliest road - from the Indiana border to New Carlisle, exploring the eastern end of State Route 571 in part one of a two-part series.
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Renee Wilde traveled to the Stephen Bell Elementary school in Bellbrook at lunch time to talk to the cafeteria staff who the students, and parents, call "Lunch Heroes."
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Renee Wilde goes searching for rare cave salamanders in southwestern Ohio. She joins a researcher who helps keep track of and preserve the state's endangered amphibian population.