
Karyn Miller-Medzon
Senior Producer, Here & Now
Karyn Miller-Medzon came to WBUR as senior writer for Morning Edition while the Supreme Court was deciding whether to award the presidency to Al Gore or George W. Bush. She worked on that show for about three years, until waking up at 2:30 a.m. lost its appeal. That's when she moved to Here & Now.
Before WBUR she wrote for newspapers including The Montreal Gazette, The Toronto Globe and Mail, The Riverdale Press and The Boston Herald, as well as for numerous magazines. Her environmental reporting earned her New York Press Association awards for writer of the year and best news story, as well as the New York Deadline Club's community service award.
At Here & Now — where she proudly holds the title of "Canadian in Residence" — Karyn enjoys covering the environment, medicine, science, politics and social issues.
She holds undergraduate and master's degrees in international relations from McGill University, a master's in journalism from Columbia University and a certificate from the Institut de Sciences Politiques de Paris. Her interests include reading, running, recovering from running injuries, traveling and baking elaborate cakes.
Recently published

New diabetes trial provides at least temporary cure for small group of severe Type 1 patients
The study included 12 patients who suffer from a subset of Type 1 diabetes known as hypoglycemic unawareness, characterized by unexpected and dangerous drops in blood sugar.

Meet the Google engineer making Maps more accessible
After a falling tree branch paralyzed him, Google software engineer Sasha Blair-Goldensohn began helping people with disabilities navigate their cities and neighborhoods.

'Randy Rainbow and the Marvelously Magical Pink Glasses' tells kids to embrace individuality
The book, loosely based on Randy Rainbow's own childhood experiences, is about a fabulously creative elementary school boy who's teased mercilessly for his clothing, his painted nails and his penchant...

Why one mother urges parents to become health care proxies for their adult children
In 2018, New Hampshire mother Shawnee Baker received a call informing her that her daughter Baylie had been involved in a serious accident. Without a legal medical proxy, Baker and...

'Money, Lies and God' details how far-right extremists work to erode democracy
Katherine Stewart has done 15 years of reporting and into anti-democracy extremism and the threats that come with it.
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Remembering Michael O'Brien, one of Connecticut's first to die of COVID-19
O'Brien died on March 26, 2020.

Fired Fish and Wildlife worker on why canceled projects were critical to environment and the economy
This week, Elon Musk said federal employees working remotely had to return to their offices or be fired, though many have already been let go.

Head of Center for Victims of Torture says USAID cuts leave thousands suffering without support
The cuts led to the closure of the group's clinics in Ethiopia.

Escape goats? Carpool tunnel syndrome? The science of mispronounced words
Here & Now revisits one of the show’s favorite topics: mispronounced words. It turns out we all do it — sometimes spending years or decades convinced we’re saying a word...

Jan. 6 officer expresses fear, anger and betrayal after Trump pardons
On Jan. 6, 2021 rioters dragged police officer Michael Fanone down the Capitol steps, tasered him and beat him until he was unconscious.