Simone Popperl
Simone Popperl is an editor for NPR's Morning Edition and Up First. She joined the network in March 2019, and since then has pitched and edited stories on everything from the legacy of burn pits in Iraq, to never-ending "infrastructure week," to California towns grappling with climate change, to American alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin's ascendance to the top of her sport. She led Noel King's reporting on the early days of the COVID-19 vaccine rollout, Steve Inskeep's reporting from swing states in the lead up to the 2020 Presidential Election, and Leila Fadel's field reporting from Kentucky on the end of Roe v. Wade.
In the first months of the SARS-COV-2 pandemic, she helped edit NPR's evening live show "The National Conversation" that brought experts on air to answer listeners' urgent questions about the major disruptions to American life wrought by the novel pathogen.
Popperl received a Ph.D in Anthropology from the University of California, Irvine for research about how sinkholes in the Dead Sea basin are changing the lives of geologists, environmentalists, tourists, industrialists and local residents in Jordan, the West Bank and Israel. She's a founding member of the Middle East Environmental Worlds Working Group, and has edited and published ethnographic research in a variety of university presses.
- Dave Chappelle talks about comedy in the age of Trump
- Kate Davis searches for home on her new album 'Fish Bowl'
- Kate Davis searches for home on her new album 'Fish Bowl'
- Mikaela Shiffrin breaks the record for most alpine skiing World Cup race wins
- Mikaela Shiffrin ties the record for most alpine skiing World Cup race wins
- What it's like to be a freed Nicaraguan political prisoner
- Hakeem Jeffries says Democrats won't pay a 'ransom note' to GOP over debt ceiling
- Harvard restores fellowship for human rights advocate critical of Israeli policies