
Jessica Meszaros
Jessica Meszaros is a reporter and host of Morning Edition at WUSF Public Media.
She’s been a voice on public radio stations across Florida since 2012 - in Miami, Fort Myers, and now Tampa.
Jessica’s writing, reporting, and hosting has been recognized by the Radio Television Digital News Association (RTDNA), the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters, the national Public Radio News Directors Inc. and the Society of Professional Journalists.
In June 2018, she was named the recipient of RTDNA’s N.S. Bienstock Fellowship for promising minority journalists in radio. Jessica graduated from Florida International University in Miami, earning a bachelor’s degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from FIU's Honors College.
Contact Jessica at 813-974-8635, on Twitter @JMMeszaros or by email at jmmeszaros@wusf.org.
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A group of young people from Florida had their lawsuit against the state over climate change dismissed by a circuit judge in Leon County on Monday, and...
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For the first time in four years, “ultra-rare” metallic blue bees have been spotted in Central Florida.
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Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Tampa will reopen on Thursday, after being closed for about two months due to the coronavirus.
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Social distancing restrictions from coronavirus have actually led to a rare community effort: the tracking of an endangered species after a north...
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The coronavirus pandemic is affecting Florida farmers differently, depending on which market to whom local growers are selling.
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The University of Florida Health Shands Hospital and the state are running a new COVID-19 testing site that could determine how prevalent the disease is...
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North Atlantic right whales – already the most endangered large whale species in the world – are becoming even more at risk as rising sea temperatures...
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Florida's red tide task force has finalized its recommendations for solutions to the toxic algae blooms and plans to deliver them to lawmakers later...
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A fungus has taken over some strawberry fields in Florida. One grower lost as many as 80 acres in Manatee County.
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The red tide blooms, which began to surface off Florida's west coast around October 2019, seem to have cleared out for now. They caused respiratory...