Shereen Marisol Meraji | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1977 (age 47–48) |
| Alma mater | San Francisco State University |
| Employer | UC Berkeley |
| Known for | Code Switch |
Shereen Marisol Meraji (born 1977)[1] is an American journalist, podcaster and educator. She is an assistant professor of race in journalism at theUC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, and is an alum of theNieman Fellowship atHarvard University.[2][3][4] She was the founding co-host and senior producer ofCode Switch, a critically acclaimed podcast covering race, culture and identity,[5] one ofNPR's highest charting podcasts in 2020.[6]
Meraji was born and raised in Northern California, the child of a Puerto Rican mother and Iranian father.[7][8][6] As a young girl, Meraji was bullied by classmates about her Iranian heritage.[9] Meraji's multi-ethnic background has informed her approach to stories and journalism, noting in an interview withLatina magazine that "never having really belonged, being on the margins while observing everything, that's made me a natural journalist – not quite a part of something, always observing".[10]
Meraji received a Bachelor of Arts in Raza Studies atSan Francisco State University.[11]
Meraji began her career as a radio reporter and producer, working and freelancing for various shows and organizations. She joined NPR in 2003, where she worked as a producer and director of the midday showDay to Day and a producer for NPR's flagship newsmagazineAll Things Considered.[12] She joinedSouthern California Public Radio in 2011 as a business and economy reporter, and reported forMarketplace's Wealth & Poverty desk in 2012.[13][14][15] In 2013, Meraji returned to NPR as a race and culture reporter on the team that would create theCode Switch blog.[16][17][18]
In 2014, Meraji was sent to report fromFerguson, Missouri during protests following thedeath of Michael Brown as a result of a police shooting. Meraji described an incident when part of her piece capturing an interview with a protester was cut from a radio program, leading to criticism from some listeners that she had failed to report on perspectives from all sides. "That made me want to do podcasts, for there to be more time to be nuanced conversations, to talk about the grey areas, to show that there are more than two sides to a story.”[9]
Starting in 2016, Meraji was one of the founding co-hosts of NPR'sCode Switch podcast, alongside co-hostGene Demby.[17] Meraji has stated that she hoped the podcast, which deals with race, culture and identity, would make "[these issues] more accessible to a broader audience."[19] Meraji's work was part of an emerging development in news content and analysis that involved engaging younger, more diverse audiences,[20] often by picking up on themes first advanced from social media platforms, blogs and pop culture.[21] According to an interview with Meraji byWWD in July 2016, the podcast had over 1 million downloads within its first two months on air, with Meraji aiming to create an inclusive space for discussing topical issues such as the shooting ofPhilando Castile, theBlack Lives Matter movement and the viewpoint of supporters ofPresident Donald Trump during the2016 election.[22]
In the wake of themurder of George Floyd in 2020,Code Switch audience numbers increased significantly, and with episodes like "Why Now White People?",[23] the show was briefly the top downloaded podcast in the country.[24]
In September 2021, Meraji leftCode Switch and NPR to accept aNieman Fellowship atHarvard University, where she worked on a project that focused on "creating media that is relevant and accessible to communities of color, working with young people, and adding depth and nuance to reporting around Latine communities."[2][4]
After her fellowship, she joined the faculty at theUC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism as an assistant professor in July 2022. In her role, she hoped to "create new publishing opportunities in podcasting for students, working with them to produce episodes on race and identity, as well as investigate other topics." She is the school's first female tenure track faculty member specializing in audio journalism.[3]
In 2007, Meraji received anInternational Reporting Project Fellowship and traveled to Beirut, Lebanon, where she reported on youth culture.[25]
Meraji gained attention for her 2014 feature forThird Coast Festival titled "Audio Code Switching: Tackling Race on the Radio,” focusing on the seeming homogeneity of voices represented in public radio, a phenomenon sometimes known as "public radio voice," and the need for greater representation of diverse voices and stories.[26] She also served as a judge for the festival in 2015.[27]
Meraji received awards from theNational Association of Hispanic Journalists in 2015 and 2016,[28] the latter for a piece she reported on about an inspirational scout leader for a troupe of at-risk boys .[29]
In December 2020,Apple Podcasts announced thatCode Switch had been selected as "Show of the Year," marking the first time that Apple Podcasts recognized a single podcast of the year.[30]
In 2021,Code Switch won anAmbie award from thePodcast Academy for "Best Society and Culture Podcast."[31]
Meraji is married to Nicholas Espíritu, a civil rights attorney.[8]