Brandon Hollingsworth
News Host and ReporterBrandon Hollingsworth is your All Things Considered host. He has served public radio audiences for fifteen years, primarily in reporting, hosting and interviewing. His previous ports-of-call were WUOT-FM in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Alabama Public Radio. His work has been heard nationally on Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Here and Now and NPR’s top-of-the-hour newscasts.
When off the air, Brandon geologizes, reads, studies the weather, collects maps and spends quality time with his husband. He is a native of St. Clair County, Alabama, and earned a B.A. in Communications from Jacksonville State University.
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Request comes after more than 800 Washingtonians died on the state's roads and highways last year.
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A brief respite between winter storms allowed Spokane and Spokane County road crews to plow and sand more than 7,000 miles of roads and streets, from dense residential areas to rural blacktops.
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Thurston Co. Superior Court Judge Mary Sue Wilson said neither state law nor the petitioners' complaint justified removing the former president's name from March ballots.
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Announced closures and delays of regional schools and school districts.
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Ferguson is asking the state court system to find the merger in violation of Washington antitrust law, and to issue an injunction that would block the merger nationwide.
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Spokane Mayor Lisa Brown declared a state of emergency Thursday, hours before temperatures began to fall to the lowest predicted levels since December 2022.
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An Arctic air mass barreling into the Inland Northwest Thursday will force temperatures to the coldest levels seen so far this winter, posing a danger to people, pets and livestock.
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Inslee unveiled proposals for a utility bill credit for low- and moderate-income Washingtonians, new spending for tackling opioids, money for special education, and a constitutional amendment protecting abortion.
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Little urged lawmakers to increase spending in certain areas, and touted the state's fiscal and social conservatism in his annual remarks Monday.
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Dean Chuang is the first person to occupy a judicial seat the Washington Legislature authorized in the late 1990s.