Natu Tweh
Morning Edition ProducerNatu Tweh is a first-year music business and entertainment industries grad student at the University of Miami. Born in Miami and raised in Kendall, he is a South Floridian native who has always lived at the intersection of multiple cultures.
With his Liberian culture in front of him and Latin culture around him, Natu grew to appreciate the stories that highlight our differences and similarities. From food to music, he enjoys crossing the bridges that link the cultures around him. The chance of a new experience pushes him in life and in storytelling.
At the University of Florida, he wrote for a music blog and hosted Connect The Dots, a show focused on music and activism on WGOT 100.1 FM. For a year he helped capture the flow of music coming through Gainesville and brought awareness to community-driven projects. Everyone has a story to tell, maybe two, and Natu believes chronicling those stories is beneficial to everyone and anyone.
After graduating from the University of Florida with a bachelor’s in journalism, his passion for learning and adventure took him to Salt Lake City. He interned with RadioWest, a talk show out of KUER 90.1. An episode he worked on booked and helped edit was awarded third place for a radio general feature from the Utah chapter of the SPJ. Now he has returned to Miami, hoping to learn everything he can at WLRN.
Aside from journalism, Natu has an ever-increasing list of hobbies and he is always excited to add something new to it. The top of this list includes music, playing rhythm games, martial arts, breakdancing, reading manga, trying new craft beer and more.
-
The city of Opa-Locka celebrates its first MENA Fest with the opening of the Opa-Locka Heritage Trail, an interpretive historic trail installation.
-
Four-star U.S. Army General Laura Richardson is the commander of U.S. Southern Command in South Florida, overseeing Latin America and the Caribbean for the Department of Defense. She tells WLRN about her journey in the military and the response to the Haiti crisis.
-
Through music, food and community, the 4th annual Afro-Carib Festival in Miramar, taking place on Feb. 17, celebrates the cultures and sounds of the African diaspora.
-
The 5000 Role Models of Excellence Project has existed for over three decades. Congresswoman Frederica Wilson reflects on the organization she founded in 1993.
-
500 of years of history and culture come to life through flamenco in a WLRN-TV special.
-
A South Florida bookstore, Books & Books, is launching a literary foundation with hopes of expanding its community programming and love of literature to more people.
-
Black youth represent roughly 17% of the population, yet they account for 58% of all youth arrests. A county trust hopes to address the issue.
-
Florida-based Equal Ground leaders discussed federal funding for HBCU’s, broadband internet access and impact of 'unsafe' state laws on millions of Black residents with senior White House officials.
-
A Miami Herald investigative reporter spent months talking to trailer park residents who live in what is truly one of the last affordable places to live in Miami. A new development is forcing them all to move.
-
The lottery for Florida's coveted quota liquor license provides versatility for business owners and a lucrative opportunity for individuals.
-
An exhibition at The Arc in Opa-locka provides a look into the civil rights movement and Black life in the South through the works of photojournalist Ernest C. Withers.
-
With the theme 'WORD! Celebrating 50 Years of Hip-Hop Culture,' this year's South Florida Book Festival celebrated the impact the genre has had in our culture, through a mix of literature and visual performances in Fort Lauderdale.