
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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A St. Louis native has amassed over 650,000 followers online thanks to his unique voiceovers of anime shows.
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In its second year, Queer Writes incorporates more diversity in performance and LGBTQ+ experiences.
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By fostering relationships with neighborhoods and community organizations that are already connected to young people, Wil Pinkney believes the City of St. Louis can better address the root causes of violence.
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The killing of Michael Brown Jr. by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson is a benchmark on the decades-long connection between Black American and Palestinian American activism.
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Adjo Honsou opened Fufu n’ Sauce two years ago to share Togolese food with the St. Louis region. Now she’s taking her food on the national stage with PBS’ “The Great American Recipe.”
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Forty artists’ works will be on display at Sophie’s Artist Lounge in Midtown.
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Gateway to Pride is the museum's first exhibition specifically about LGBTQIA+ history and experiences across Missouri and the Metro East.
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What changes — for better or worse — have happened since “For the Sake of All” was published 10 years ago?
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“As You Like It” will be onstage from May 29 through June 23.
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“InVISIBLE: A Reclaiming of the Asian Gaze” opens May 17 at Wildfruit Projects.
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Not much has changed in how universities react to protests on campus. Here’s why one professor finds that problematic.
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Despite being invisible, air serves as inspiration for Paul Chan’s recent work.