I first worked at the RN&R in 2004-05 as the arts editor. At the time, I saw the job as a likely stepping stone into a career in arts administration. I didnโ€™t have much news experience, but I learned as I went. (Itโ€™s hard to imagine a better boot camp than sharing an office with then-news editor Dennis Myers and having then-editor Brian Burghart stand over my shoulder with a red pen for a year.)

I loved being part of Renoโ€™s ongoing conversations about news and culture. And seeing Northern Nevada through the various lenses of people I interviewedโ€”artists, politicians, scientists, educatorsโ€”broadened my worldview by the minute. 

Within a month, journalismโ€”local, independent journalism in particularโ€”had me hooked. I remember sitting at my desk thinking, โ€œIโ€™ve never been able to answer the question, โ€˜What do you want to be doing in 20 years?โ€™ But I think it is probably this.โ€

In the ensuing 19 years, my lifeโ€”and the RN&Rโ€™sโ€”have been through a few different iterations, but weโ€™ve always been a match. I was on staff again in 2016-18, and Iโ€™ve been a freelance contributor for pretty much the entire two decades.

Long story shortโ€”Iโ€™m delighted to be back, this time as the managing editor. Itโ€™s still a privilege to be part of the ongoing conversations Reno is having about itself and the world.

I recommend picking up our October print issue, of course. Be sure to check out Zoe Dixonโ€™s โ€œLake Tahoeโ€™s 2023 report cardโ€ on Page 12, or click here. Zoe found out what scientists have been observing lately about water quality, invasive species and other need-to-know measures of the iconic lakeโ€™s health and future.

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