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Natalie Escobar

Natalie Escobar

Assistant Editor at Code Switch - NPR/National Public Radio

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Influence score
66
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Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Entertainment
  • Society
  • Demographics

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Recent Articles

npr.org

What Alice Wu Wants To Say In ‘The Half Of It’

Alice Wu’s 2004 film ‘Saving Face’ changed the landscape of LGBTQ and Asian American cinema. Now, she’s back with her new film ‘The Half of It,’ a sweet teen movie that bucks easy classification.
npr.org

Educational Podcasts For Kids From NPR's Code Switch : Code Switch ...

Having trouble finding ways to critically engage your kids during pandemic homeschooling? We rounded up some of our most kid-friendly episodes from the archives to help out.
npr.org

Supreme Court's DACA Decision Is 'Game Changer' For Dreamers : Code...

The 2012 executive order didn’t just offer protection and open up opportunities for young undocumented people; it changed the landscape for entire family networks.
npr.org

One Author's Controversial View: 'In Defense Of Looting' : Code Switch

In her provocative book, writer Vicky Osterweil argues that looting is a tool to bring about change in society.
npr.org

U.S. Sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson Will Not Compete In The Tokyo Ol...

The 21-year-old was left off the U.S. Track & Field Olympic roster, despite her astonishing performance at last month’s trials, due to a 30-day suspension following a positive drug test for THC.
npr.org

How Sandra Cisneros Found Space To Be 'Barefoot' And 'Rude'

On the latest episode of Code Switch, Cisneros talks about why she became obsessed with houses, what it was like to finally buy one, and—spoiler alert—what it felt like to fall out of love with it.
npr.org

Tell us: What's the best book to read about your state? - NPR

NPR Books asked state poets laureate, librarians and bookstore owners to recommend books they love about their states. Now, it’s your turn.
npr.org

The 2nd suspect in the Saskatchewan stabbings has died in police cu...

Myles Sanderson, the second suspect in the stabbing deaths of 10 people in the province of Saskatchewan, died after going into what police described as “medical distress.”
npr.org

Weaving is how I ground myself, and make something beautiful at the...

What started off as an impulse-driven hobby at the start of the pandemic has turned into the closest thing to an artistic practice that I’ve ever had.
npr.org

Our presidential candidates have never been older. You can thank th...

The U.S. Constitution requires a president to be 35 or older, but only a lower age limit exists. There has never been an upper one.
npr.org

A photographer captured the perfect shot of an Olympic surfer's rec...

AFP photographer Jerome Brouillet captured the Brazilian world champion Gabriel Medina surfing through a huge wave in a ride that would net an Olympic-record score.