Emily Siner
Emily Siner is an enterprise reporter at WPLN. She has worked at the Los Angeles Times and NPR headquarters in Washington, D.C., and her written work was recently published in Slices Of Life, an anthology of literary feature writing. Born and raised in the Chicago area, she is a graduate from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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First-generation mortuary students represent a major change in an industry long dominated by local family businesses. Those students also face their own set of challenges.
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The parents of the 2-year-old boy who died in a flash flood at Cummins Falls State Park last month have started the process to sue the state of...
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Tennessee Reconnect has helped thousands of adults afford a college education, but for many older students, the financial support may not be enough to get them to the finish line.
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Nashville will be home to a new distribution hub for the retail giant Amazon, bringing 5,000 corporate jobs to the city in what public officials are…
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For the past half-century an archive in Nashville has kept up and recorded almost every national news broadcast. Now, 50 years later, archivists are learning some interesting tidbits.
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The four-year results are in on Tennessee's free college initiative. Is this new data significant enough to sway the future of these free college programs?
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The "co-write" is a staple of music-making in Nashville that draws on personal experiences and intimate details. Several women, however, say that collaboration can be fraught.
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It’s official: Major League Soccer is bringing a top-level team to Nashville.Calling it a “city on the rise,” MLS commissioner Don Garber made the…
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Free college programs are popping up across the country, but Tennessee is the first state to offer free community college to almost every adult, regardless of when they finished high school.
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Some people in Nashville's Kurdish community — the largest in the U.S. — are worried about Trump's executive order on immigration. Reports of Green Card holders turned away overseas are causing panic.