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Josie Huang
What I cover
I report on how culture and community shape life across Southern California with a focus on underrepresented voices.
My background
I began in newspapers out of college, covering everything from Central America’s largest dump to post-Katrina Mississippi. I moved into public radio as a host and reporter in Maine before joining LAist in 2012. For my reporting, which has spanned immigration to housing and religion, I’ve earned a regional Edward R. Murrow award and honors from the L.A. chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, the L.A Press Club, the Asian American Journalists Association and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.
My goals
I aim to amplify stories that might otherwise go unheard and connect to the people and places that make Southern California such a dynamic home.
How to contact me
I would love to hear your ideas and thoughts about our coverage. Please reach me at jhuang@laist.com.
Stories by Josie Huang
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Reality TV jobs have dried up for many producers. Some have turned to gig work to survive.
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Mizuhara allegedly stole more than $16 million from the Dodger star. He now faces up to 33 years in prison.
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Chang, a regular FilmWeek guest on LAist 89.3, left the L.A. Times earlier this year.
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More than 120 starving pelicans have been rescued in last month.
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Miyamoto's the subject of a new documentary premiering Saturday at the VC Film Fest.
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Little Tokyo made the list created annually by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
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Anthony Sperl says he wasn’t planning to replace Suehiro Cafe with a marijuana dispensary, as feared by neighborhood leaders.
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The world's largest geneaology site has partnered with a USC professor-led project created to make a comprehensive list of incarcerees.
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About a dozen Taiwanese American groups have joined forces to raise money for victims of the worst quake to strike Taiwan in a quarter century.
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A group of Korean Americans are pushing to move the Koreatown museum project forward decades after being proposed.
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Aftershocks were almost as strong as the 1994 Northridge earthquake.
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The state's unemployment agency just expanded language options to include Armenian, Korean, and Tagalog.