Gwendolyn Glenn
Host, WFAE's All Things ConsideredGwendolyn is an award-winning journalist who has covered a broad range of stories on the local and national levels. Her experience includes producing on-air reports for National Public Radio and she worked full-time as a producer for NPR’s All Things Considered news program for five years. She worked for several years as an on-air contract reporter for CNN in Atlanta and worked in print as a reporter for the Baltimore Sun Media Group, The Washington Post and covered Congress and various federal agencies for the Daily Environment Report and Real Estate Finance Today. Glenn has won awards for her reports from the Maryland-DC-Delaware Press Association, SNA and the first-place radio award from the National Association of Black Journalists.
-
York County Council members approved Silfab Solar's multimillion-dollar solar plant operation in Fort Mill. However, residents have concerns about the environment and increased traffic.
-
Two Queens University officials talk about Friday's Hispanic Heritage Month Festival and its importance to them on a personal level.
-
Hispanic Heritage Month begins Friday worldwide. In Charlotte, Queens University kicks off the celebration with a festival spotlighting 12 countries.
-
City funds to support Freedom Fighting Missionaries rental townhouse complex for formerly incarcerated people in east Charlotte put on hold because of concerns raised by some residents.
-
When the International African American Museum in Charleston, South Carolina, opens to the public on June 27, it will have been a 20-year journey — and not always an easy one.
-
An inside look at the new International African American Museum's nine galleries, which focus on the history of African Americans and their descendants from an international, national and local point of view. The museum in Charleston opens June 27.
-
New International African American Museum honors journey of Black people from slavery to present dayAfter more than two decades in the making, the International African American Museum in Charleston, South Carolina, officially opens to the public on June 27 with a mission to tell the story of African Americans in the U.S. as well as their ties across the world.
-
What does it mean for a small town when the mill that’s been the center of economic and social life for a century closes? And what is a mill town without its mill? That’s what happened Wednesday in the mountain town of Canton, about 140 miles west of Charlotte, a place that’s long been known as “Papertown.” WFAE's Gwendolyn Glenn spoke about the impact of the Pactiv Evergreen closure with Canton's Mayor Zeb Smathers.
-
JCSU exhibit focuses on Negro National Baseball League — an often forgotten part of American historyAn exhibition opens at Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte, that focuses on the Negro National (Baseball) League and its connections to North Carolina —home to several baseball greats.
-
Dr. Kevin Scruggs talks about his path to becoming a veterinarian and the challenges he faced in opening his own vet hospital in Charlotte.