Kim Malcolm
Afternoon News Host
About
Kim is the local news host of KUOW's All Things Considered, airing from 3 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. weekdays. Kim covers breaking and developing daily news, both local and regional, as part of NPR's afternoon drive time programming. She has covered the arts, municipal government, politics, and misinformation as part of KUOW's Stand with the Facts live event series, in partnership with the University of Washington's Center for an Informed Public. She really enjoys election night coverage, in spite of herself. Kim started out in broadcast journalism in Calgary at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, before working at NPR member station KERA in Dallas and then KUOW. Kim spends most winters waiting for baseball season to start.
Location: Seattle and the Eastside
Languages: English
Pronouns: she/her
Podcasts
Stories
-
Black Lives Matter, ACLU say Seattle Police violated court order with violence in protests
Black Lives Matter Seattle-King County and the ACLU of Washington are asking a federal judge to hold the city of Seattle in contempt of court over police use of force over the weekend against people protesting racial injustice.
-
Bear News: An interview with Chris Morgan
On the conservation roller coaster, good and bad news for grizzly bears.
-
Lawyers Guild observer believes her group was targeted by police at protest
‘In that moment, I actually honestly thought that they had broken my ankle.’
-
The ACLU of Washington is monitoring the presence of federal agents in Seattle
‘Meeting calls for the end to police brutality and systemic racism with more brutality is not the way to go.’
-
Baseball is back for a shorter, stranger, quieter season
No fans. No peanuts. Still, ‘a World Series title is a World Series title.’
-
Secretary of Health ‘very concerned’ about rising coronavirus cases
'One, limit your activity. Two, stay six feet away from others, and wear face coverings.’
-
Federal unemployment aid is coming to an end, but the economic crisis persists. What’s next?
Unemployed people in our state are about to lose $600 a week. This is money that the federal government has been adding to unemployment checks during the pandemic. Now, that program is coming to an end, even though the economic crisis is not over.
-
Thousands of Washingtonians still waiting for first unemployment check
One woman’s story of unemployment insecurity during the pandemic
-
On the conservation roller coaster, good and bad news for grizzly bears
‘We used to have around 50,000 grizzly bears in the lower 48 in historical times. Now, there are 2000.’
-
Journalist arrested at the CHOP protest tells his story
‘It wasn't a pleasant experience. I wouldn't wish it on anyone. I got a remarkable insight, but that wasn't my intention.’