
Susan Giles Wantuck
Susan Giles Wantuck is our midday news host, and a producer and reporter for WUSF Public Media who focuses her storytelling on arts, culture and history.
She also serves as a music host on Florida's Classical Music Station, WSMR 89.1, 103.9 and at wsmr.org.
She is a lifelong resident with deep roots in Florida. She collects recipes and enjoys writing.
Susan is a graduate of the University of South Florida, where she studied Mass Communication. The Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Association and the Society of Professional Journalists have honored her hosting and reporting work.
Person Page
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It's been a long time since Florida's Gulf Coast has seen a red tide outbreak this severe.
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The City of Sarasota has declared a state of emergency over the toxic red tide bloom that began in November. Todd Kerkering is the emergency manager for...
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Florida beachgoers often imagine a day on the water. Colorful umbrellas peppered across the sand, the sound of waves foaming as they crash onto the...
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FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is putting blue plastic sheeting on homes damaged by Hurricane Irma.
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Floridians are old pros when it comes to hurricane preparation, but these last few years of near hurricane drought may have taken the edge off storm...
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About two weeks from now on August 21, a lot of people will be looking up. They will be witnessing the first "coast to coast" solar eclipse visible in...
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The folks who work at the Guy Harvey Research Institute at Nova Southeastern University are hoping that people will come to understand the critical link...
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Authorities are calling the Pasco County sinkhole that swallowed up two homes last week the biggest sinkhole in the state in recent history. At last...
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More than 140 wildfires are burning in the state of Florida today. It's a "red flag warning" day in inland portions of West Central Florida today, which...
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In Florida, it's always wildfire season. But spring is the time of year when the risk is highest.
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The Florida Highway Patrol says there were more than 100,000 hit and run crashes in the state last year alone. That left more than 1,200 people...