Chris Miller
Producer, Charlotte Talks With Mike CollinsA veteran of Charlotte radio news, Chris joined the "Charlotte Talks" staff in January 2016, but has been listening to WFAE since discovering the station as a high schooler.
Chris is a native of the Charlotte area. His love of radio began when Hurricane Hugo hit Charlotte on his 7th birthday. He still has the Fisher-Price radio his family listened to as they rode out the storm.
During his career, Chris has won numerous awards for his coverage of some of the biggest stories Charlotte has seen, from ice storms and political conventions, to a mayoral corruption scandal and Charlotte's struggles through the Great Recession.
Have an idea for the show? Email him at cmiller@wfae.org and follow him on Twitter: @MillerTimeCLT
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CNN political analyst Bakari Sellers father was shot by police in Orangeburg, South Carolina, during a campus protest in the 1960s. Sellers sees striking parallels to protests that roiled the country last summer.
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In what shape is Donald Trump leaving the presidency?
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Congress meets Wednesday to count the votes of the Electoral College. It promises to be messy, but with Joe Biden’s resounding victory in the popular vote, why is this even necessary?
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The Founding Fathers still loom large in American politics, but who inspired them when it came to starting this “Great Experiment” in government?
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Can companies mix business with politics without losing customers? It's a tough act to pull off in our hyper-politicized climate.
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What is supposed to be a milestone in the pandemic is coming as North Carolina notched new records of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations.
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One of the big winners of the 2020 election was marijuana reform. What are the chances North Carolina will relax its stance?
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The partisan warfare of the 1990s laid the groundwork for today's politics, says the NBC and MSNBC national political correspondent.
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Ruth Ben-Ghiat sent up a red flag in January 2017 that an authoritarian was about to take office. Have the ensuing years only proven her right?
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The Founding Fathers still loom large in American politics, but who inspired them when it came to starting this “Great Experiment” in government?