Skip to main content

Jennie Cecil Moore

Producer

About

Jennie Cecil Moore is a producer on KUOW’s news shows who has covered the labor market, housing, reproductive rights, transit, food insecurity, law, and the arts.

She has a particular interest in cultural, economic, and equity stories.

Her career in public broadcasting has taken her to San Francisco, Boston, and France. Outside of news, she’s produced museum and public garden audio guides, arts and literary podcasts, and partnered with non-profits around storytelling. She has also contributed to documentaries and cooking series.

Location: Seattle

Languages: English, French

Pronouns: she/her

Stories

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Secret Seattle

    We all got to know our neighborhoods a LOT better during quarantine, but Susanna Ryan went above and beyond. She runs the Seattle Walk Report Instagram account, and has a new book about the hidden history of objects on the city's streets — Secret Seattle.

  • caption: A Puget Sound pilot disembarks from a containership.

    Go deep — piloting Puget Sound

    Safely navigating narrow Puget Sound passages is tricky business, especially for cargo boats. Port pilots and scientists make these journeys possible.

  • caption: One-year-old Quentin Brown, is held by his mother, Heather Brown, as he eyes a swab while being tested for COVID-19 at a new walk-up testing site at Chief Sealth High School, Friday, Aug. 28, 2020, in Seattle. The child's daycare facility requires testing for the virus. The coronavirus testing site is the fourth now open by the city and is free.

    'A very rough fall in Seattle for pediatric patients' as delta variant spreads

    The now-dominant delta variant has changed the pandemic we’ve come to know so well. Whereas kids were previously less affected by the coronavirus, they are now increasingly at risk. This has many families wondering how they should balance their kids' childhood with protecting them from the pandemic.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Some answers about young kids and covid

    Sleepovers, playdates, water parks, even school. These were all things kids couldn’t wait to get back to as vaccination rates went up and cases went down. But with new covid variants circulating, some families are wondering when to press pause on the activities.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    'My life and my voice,' the art of FEWOCiOUS

    An 18-year-old artist just recently crashed a Christie’s online auction site. He goes by FEWOCiOUS, he just moved to Seattle from Las Vegas, he's made millions selling his art as NFTs and we'll meet him today.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    The Summer Olympics (of local elections) are underway!

    Between wildfires, the delta variant and billionaires flying to space, maybe you missed that Seattle’s primary election is happening next week. Dig out that ballot! Crosscut reporter David Kroman is here to help us figure out what’s at stake.

  • caption: Brittany Rios shows off Adelaide, her Covid nurse tattoo. Tattoo art by Mark Meyer with Goodland Tattoo.

    Here's how the pandemic inspired a fresh wave of new ink

    The pandemic has been brutal, the loss staggering. Family members, neighbors, beloved community members, everyone has a story and some people are telling theirs with a new tattoo COVID has spurred a fresh wave of new ink.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Seattle Now: Pandemic tattoos

    The pandemic has been brutal, the loss, staggering. Everyone has a story, and some people are telling theirs with a new tattoo. We explore what people are deciding to get and why.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    The tourist tide is coming back in

    Half of all American adults are now fully vaccinated, and people are itching to travel just in time for Seattle's busy tourist season. We take a field trip to Pike Place Market to see how one of the city's most popular attractions is holding up.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Colleges add a vaccine prereq

    UW and WSU want students to get vaccinated before coming back to campus this fall. Katie Mangan at the Chronicle for Higher Education explains what it could mean.