Olivia Mizelle
Student ReporterOlivia Mizelle is a student reporter at KBIA
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In this episode, we’re having some fun. We’ll meet people who choose to spend their time sweating on the river. Our producers spent this past autumn meeting casual trail users, dry-land athletes and big river paddlers who enjoy actually getting their feet wet.
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Lee Street Deli, also known as LSD, closed last summer. But it's opening again April 27 under partners Trinity Rainey and Katie Neely.
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In the very first episode of River Town, we’re exploring how the Missouri River of today inspires artists -- from folk musicians, to watercolor painters with a penchant for pretzel paddle boating, to writers recounting their childhood “flood monster” memories. We want to know . . . no shame for this pun . . . How does the Missouri River help artists find their flow?
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The service center supports Sedalia residents on multiple fronts.
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Columbia is collaborating with MU's Panhellenic Association to improve Greektown sidewalks, along with improvements throughout the city.
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After promising radiopharmaceuticals in the research phase, MU pioneers a cancer-killing isotope.
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KBIA's Olivia Mizelle sat down with Emily Mkrtichian, the filmmaker of "There Was, There Was Not," to unpack the making of the film before its world premiere at True/False Film Fest 2024 tonight at 7:30.
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Bird, fish, cat. That's the way band Blue-Eyed Mary describes its sound. Singers Effie Lillig and Kathryn Myers sat down with KBIA's Olivia Mizelle to discuss their love for music ahead of their performance at the 2024 True/False Film Fest.