Kim Malcolm
Afternoon News Host
About
Kim is the local news host of KUOW's All Things Considered, airing from 3 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. weekdays. Kim covers breaking and developing daily news, both local and regional, as part of NPR's afternoon drive time programming. She has covered the arts, municipal government, politics, and misinformation as part of KUOW's Stand with the Facts live event series, in partnership with the University of Washington's Center for an Informed Public. She really enjoys election night coverage, in spite of herself. Kim started out in broadcast journalism in Calgary at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, before working at NPR member station KERA in Dallas and then KUOW. Kim spends most winters waiting for baseball season to start.
Location: Seattle and the Eastside
Languages: English
Pronouns: she/her
Stories
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Senior NOAA researchers are being forced out. Is Trump 'killing science'?
As part of its concerted effort to shrink government agencies, the Trump administration has choked off funding to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The cuts have forced scientists who've done groundbreaking work here in the Northwest to leave their positions.
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Sole survivor of deadly North Cascades climbing accident shares details
We’re learning more about the climbing accident that left three men dead in the North Cascades last weekend. The men were identified yesterday as 48-year-old Vishnu Irigireddy of Renton, 36-year-old Oleksander Martynenko of Bellevue, and 63-year-old Tim Nguyen of Renton. One man survived what the Okanogan County Sheriff's Office says was a 400-foot fall. It's one of Washington state's worst climbing accidents since 2014, when six climbers fell to their deaths at Mount Rainier. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm spoke to Seattle Times reporter Catalina Gaitán about what happened.
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Seattle’s 135-year-old ‘irrational’ love affair with Bartell Drugs draws to a sad close
We learned recently that all of the remaining Bartell Drugs stores will close this year unless Rite Aid finds a buyer. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm reached out to local historian Feliks Banel to mark the sad final chapter of a remarkable business story. They talked about what led to the moment in 1890 when 22-year-old pharmacist George H. Bartell Sr. bought a drug store in Seattle, and what happened next.
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The Blue Jays are coming! Canadian fans, not so much
Just how many royal blue Blue Jays baseball jerseys and hats will grace the streets around Seattle’s T-Mobile Park and SoDo this weekend? That’s the big question as the Seattle Mariners, local hotels, restaurants and hospitality businesses cross their fingers ahead of Blue Jays Weekend. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm looked for answers.
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UW officials, police unclear how many arrested pro-Palestinian protesters were students
Pro-Palestinian protesters could be facing charges of trespassing, property destruction, disorderly conduct, and conspiracy to commit all three after taking over the University of Washington Interdisciplinary Engineering Building Monday night.
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After a close election, Canadians stand together against ‘the Trump factor’
Canadians are working through new political realities after a national election last week amid comments from President Donald Trump about Canada becoming the 51st state.
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A record-size run of pink salmon may be headed toward Washington state
Biologists expect a record number of pink salmon to return to Puget Sound and Washington rivers and streams this year. And while that may seem like a good signal about salmon habitat, it's also raising some concerns.
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With clock ticking, WA lawmakers race to cover $16 billion shortfall in budget plan
With a potential $16 billion shortfall looming, legislators in Olympia are scrambling to find budget fixes with less than two weeks left in the session. Jerry Cornfield writes for The Washington State Standard. He spoke to KUOW’s Kim Malcolm about his new article, which outlines the latest options being considered.
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Scientists at NOAA lab in Seattle cleaned bathrooms after maintenance contracts lapsed
A Fisheries Union representative says government efficiency measures are backfiring
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National Endowment for the Humanities grants to Washington organizations are being cut under Trump
Last week, the National Endowment for the Humanities under the Trump administration canceled the grants they send to the states, including Washington.