Tony Gonzalez
Tony Gonzalez oversees WPLN’s special projects, produces the Curious Nashville podcast, and edits freelance contributions. Since arriving in Nashville in 2011, he’s covered major breaking news, tapped into data and public records for civics stories, and featured inspiring people and unusual tales. He lives in East Nashville with his wife and daughter and dabbles in hobbies like juggling, gardening, and birdwatching.
-
In Nashville, authorities have arrested the gunman they say killed four people at a Waffle House on Sunday. The suspect had been known to law enforcement and questions are swirling about why he had access to guns.
-
This was not how David Briley expected his day to go. The new mayor of Nashville described his first, unexpected hours in office on Tuesday as “drinking...
-
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…
-
"Max is not going to text me back. I'm not going to hear his voice again," Mayor Megan Barry said of her only child. The 22-year-old died last month of an apparent overdose near Denver.
-
The Georgia Democrat says he almost cried when he realized his visit to Nashville included an unexpected gift. Leaders presented him with an artifact from his early days of civil rights activism.
-
Some unlikely allies in Nashville have united to expunge the record of a man convicted of a so-called "sodomy" law in 1995. His record has been cleared, but charges against 41 men have come to light.
-
As part of our "Nation Engaged" project, we're asking what does it mean to be an American? For one answer, we meet a prolific political talk show caller known widely as "Carl from Nashville."
-
If you’ve ever wondered who writes the digital highway signs up above you on Tennessee interstates — well, some of the most popular were created in a...
-
The mobile Wi-Fi hot spots let people get Internet service anywhere there's a cell connection. The library in Spring Hill, Tenn., is joining the likes of big-city libraries in New York and Chicago.
-
A Nashville high school tried out a "digital cleanse" recently — a group of students stopped using their phones for 24 hours. They missed a lot of messages, but got a lesson in return.