Andrea Gutierrez : NPR

September 2024 · 3 minute read
Andrea Gutierrez : NPR Accessibility links

Andrea Gutierrez Andrea Gutierrez is a producer on Ted Radio Hour.

Friday November 24, 2023

José Antonio Vargas presentation on the TED MainStage, as part of TED2020 TED hide caption

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Who belongs in America? An undocumented journalist tells his story

Friday November 10, 2023

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Uruguay is a renewable energy utopia. How did it get there?

Saturday November 4, 2023

Germans prep for pot legalization

Friday July 14, 2023

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The cutest mammal you haven't heard about and how to save it

Friday June 30, 2023

Gilberto Tadday / TED

How a smart map could reel in the outlaws of the ocean

Friday June 16, 2023

How do our brains perceive our future selves? One psychologist wanted to know

Friday May 19, 2023

Ryan Lash / TED

What a living whale is worth in the fight against climate change

Friday May 5, 2023

Emily Pilloton-Lam speaks at TEDWomen 2021: What Now? Marla Aufmuth/Marla Aufmuth / TED hide caption

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The trades need more gender diversity. One woman is training the next generation

Friday March 24, 2023

Gilberto Tadday/Gilberto Tadday / TED

How to turn everyday moves (even typing!) into dance

Saturday March 18, 2023

Bug Robbins

Tweeting directly from your brain (and what's next)

Friday March 17, 2023

Ryan Lash/Ryan Lash / TED

What if a brain was given technology?

Friday February 24, 2023

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What children can teach us about asking for help

Friday January 27, 2023

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How the first LGBTQ+ video game was given a second life

Friday December 9, 2022

Jennifer Polixenni Brankin / TEDxSydney

What if we gave our technology a face?

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What it's like to remember nearly every face

Friday November 18, 2022

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Our Late Bloomer Stories: Listener Voice Memos

Chris Suspect / TED

What your age really says about your chance of success at work

Friday November 4, 2022

Courtesy of TED

Building a library of unread manuscripts, locked away until 2114

Monday October 31, 2022

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The Grim Reaper of retail: Spirit Halloween

Friday October 28, 2022

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Tuesday October 25, 2022

Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images; Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images; John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images; Amanda Edwards/Getty Images; Photo Illustration by. Kaz Fantone

The Grim Reaper of retail: Spirit Halloween

Monday October 24, 2022

Pablo Arellano Spataro/HBO; Photo Illustration by Kaz Fantone

'Los Espookys' co-creator Julio Torres hates main character energy

Friday September 30, 2022

Mhari Shaw/NPR

How Tiny Desk became a go-to spot for hip-hop

Tuesday September 27, 2022

Author Julissa Arce makes the case for rejecting assimilation in her latest book, You Sound Like a White Girl. Aly Honore hide caption

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September 27, 2022 • Julissa Arce used to think that the secret to fitting in was to "sound white" — to speak English perfectly, with no accent. And for years after her family came to the U.S. from Mexico, she did all the things immigrants are "supposed" to do to assimilate: she went to college, got a job at Goldman Sachs and became an American citizen.

For author Julissa Arce, 'sounding white' isn't a compliment

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