Cecilia Lei joins SFChronicle as Fifth & Mission podcast co-host and producer
Bay Area native joins newsroom s expanding audio team on flagship daily news show
SFChronicle PR
FacebookTwitterEmail
Cecilia Lei joins The San Francisco Chronicle as Fifth & Mission podcast co-host and producer.Courtesy Cecilia Lei
From Director of Product and Strategy Tim O’Rourke and Deputy Director of Product and Strategy Sarah Feldberg:
We’re thrilled to announce that Cecilia Lei has joined The Chronicle as the co-host and producer of Fifth & Mission, our flagship daily local news podcast.
Cecilia comes to our newsroom from Vox, where she produced the daily news podcast “Today, Explained.” She has experience in both audio and online reporting, with her work often focusing on coverage of race, immigration, criminal justice and the Asian American community in the Bay Area. Her stories have appeared on Vox.com, NPR, the East Bay Express and KQED.
An employee s boss : How HuffPost s Danielle Belton will steer the newsroom after a tumultuous year digiday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from digiday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Noxious Neighbors: The EPA Knows Tanks Holding Heavy Fuels Emit Harmful Chemicals Why Are Americans Still at Risk? insideclimatenews.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from insideclimatenews.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
My Old Home: A Novel of Exile that was 40 years in the making. Credit: Orville Schell
This story is brought to you by the Bay Area Book Festival.
By Cherilyn Parsons
After 17 nonfiction books and countless articles, longtime Berkeley resident, journalist and China expert Orville Schell has published a novel,
My Old Home: A Novel of Exile. Forty years in the making, the novel follows a Western-trained Chinese classical musician and his son, Little Li, through China’s tumult from 1949 when Mao summoned overseas Chinese back to the Motherland to help build a new society to the crushing of intellectual, artistic and individual life during the Cultural Revolution, and ultimately to the 1989 massacre at Tiananmen Square.