
Miya Norfleet
St. Louis on the Air ProducerMiya Norfleet is a lifelong St. Louisan with a love of storytelling and community engagement. Before joining St. Louis on the Air, Miya served as the founding Director of Digital Communication at Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri and associate producer at Nine PBS. Notable projects include producing the weekly public affairs program “Stay Tuned” and two feature-length documentaries, “Works in Progress” and “Gentlemen of Vision.” Miya is a proud graduate of Webster University with a bachelor’s degree in Video Production and spent five months at the Hua Hin/Cha-Am, Thailand campus.
In her free time, Miya is enjoying time with her niece and nephews, shopping for new houseplants, relearning how to roller skate, visiting museum exhibits, going to concerts and dining at local restaurants.
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First-person accounts from cancer survivors are helping medical professionals in the classroom and the examination room.
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A family at their wits end brought their son, given the pseudonym “Robbie Mannheim,” to Jesuit priests from St. Louis University for an exorcism in 1949. The story has been fodder for urban legend ever since.
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After more than two years of work, the Tiny House project in St. Louis’ Benton Park West neighborhood is complete.
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Students today face a fear that was unheard of in previous generations.
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Touchy Topics Tuesday creates spaces for “intentional integration” among St. Louisans of varying backgrounds.
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Wes Hoffman has been a familiar face in St. Louis’ pop-punk community since the early aughts.
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Discover your next favorite artist with these new tracks from St. Louis musicians.
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History teacher Rodney Wilson began the work which led to LGBT History Month on the University of Missouri-St. Louis campus in 1994.
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Since 1990, the St. Louis Zoo has played an instrumental role in bringing Tahitian snails back from the brink of extinction.
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The cookbook celebrates the state’s many ethnicities and cultures and puts it on your plate.
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Black women make up the fastest-growing group of entrepreneurs, but their motivations to be their own boss stem from systemic racism and misogyny in corporate America.
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Brad Edwards and doula Kyra Betts chat at a Dads to Doulas information session in a birthing suite in Barnes-Jewish Hospital.