Paige Browning
Newscaster
About
Paige Browning is a news anchor and reporter for KUOW Public Radio, covering breaking news and stories of significance in the Puget Sound region. Paige's work is featured on KUOW's airwaves daily, and she is a backup host for KUOW's drive-time shows and Seattle Now podcast.
A native of the Northwest, Paige takes special interest in stories about climate change, our changing culture(s), politics, and law. Paige's work has been featured on the NPR newscast, All Things Considered, Here and Now, the BBC, and local public radio stations throughout the northwest. She has lived and worked in Spokane, Missoula (MT), and Seattle.
Her specialty is writing news under a one day deadline, but she's also stepped onto wildfire scorched land, rappelled from a building, and been to the heart of protests for stories.
Paige likes to run, bike, camp, and linger around at art exhibits and concert venues, and thinks the Seattle Storm are the city's best team to see.
Location: Seattle
Languages: English, beginner Spanish
Pronouns: she/her
Professional Affiliations: SAG-AFTRA Shop Steward, Delta Gamma Alumna
Podcasts
Stories
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Seattle's "Thunderpussy" awaits Supreme Court ruling
The Seattle rock band will find out soon whether it can trademark the rights to its name
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These six games will show what the Mariners are made of
They've won nearly every game in their first four weeks of the season.
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Sexual abuse laws poised for massive changes in Washington state
State lawmakers on Tuesday voted unanimously to make changes sexual abuse laws that advocates have been demanding for decades. The biggest: Going forward, there will be no statute of limitations for people who survived sexual abuse when they were under 16.
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Grounding of 737 Max has ripple effect for Boeing suppliers
KUOW's Paige Browning speaks with Scott Hamilton, aerospace analyst with Hamilton Company, about the ripple effect from issues with Boeing's 737 Max planes.
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Seattle says 5,700 people got out of homelessness last year
KUOW's Paige Browning speaks with reporter Kate Walters about new data from the city. Seattle officials say more than 5,700 people went from homelessness to permanent housing in Seattle last year with help from city-funded programs.
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WA Democrats vote to ditch caucuses for 2020 presidential nomination
KUOW's Paige Browning speaks with Mark Alan Smith, political science professor at the University of Washington, about the decision by Washington state Democrats to change the way they nominate presidential candidates.
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PHOTOS: Makah Indian whale hunts from 1900s
The Makah Tribe held a final hunt in 1999, but has not since practiced its whaling rights.
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Makah Tribe could again hunt whales off Washington coast
The Makah Tribe held a final hunt in 1999, but has not since practiced its whaling rights.
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Suspect in Seattle ride-share assault turns himself in
A suspect has turned himself in to police, after a Seattle woman said she was raped when trying to catch a ride-share car home.
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The bill aimed at closing Washington's gender wage gap
Working women in Washington make about 75 cents for every dollar a man makes, on average.