Jason MargolisJM

Jason Margolis

Show EditorThe World
As the show editor at The World, I work with reporters, producers and host to help set our news agenda each morning, then edit many of the words listeners hear later that day. I also work with a team of editors and reporters to develop longer-term features and run our internship program. Prior to becoming the show editor, I spent 13 years as a reporter/correspondent, and occasional fill-in editor, with The World. Even though my role has changed, I'm trying to keep my reporting hat on as well, as time permits. My most-recent stories focus primarily on global business, trade, and economics. But I have also regularly covered environmental issues and climate change, US foreign policy and politics, agriculture, and immigration reform. Since I began working at The World full time back in 2006, I’ve reported from more than 20 countries and 43 US states, including the top of a rickety tower 150 feet above the Panamanian jungle, an abandoned Ukrainian town near Chernobyl, and shops and restaurants along the Texas-Mexico border. I feel quite lucky to have met so many interesting people in so many fascinating places. I’ve also been a reporter with KQED Public Radio in its Sacramento bureau, The Seattle Times newspaper, MarketWatch in San Francisco, and NPR’s business desk. I have a master’s degree in journalism from the University of California at Berkeley and a bachelor’s degree in history from UCLA.During the 2014-15 academic year, I was selected as a Knight-Wallace fellow at the University of Michigan where I joined a small group of domestic and international journalists for a year of study. I focused my learning on climate change policies and science, as well as business sustainability practices and urban planning. I also took two screenwriting classes, learned to ice skate, and ran my first marathon in Detroit. I'm now up to three. I’ve won a few awards along the way, including being recognized three times by the Society of Environmental Journalism for “outstanding reporting.” I was also a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists and am the recipient of multiple reporting awards from Northern California journalism associations. Throughout my travels, my favorite place remains the Sierra Nevada Mountains in my native Northern California, but Sydney, Australia, the islands of the Philippines, and Alaska rank pretty high too. Sweden isn't bad either. I now live near Boston with my wife, two children, and labrador retriever Winnie. I firmly believe it’s possible to support both the Boston Red Sox and San Francisco Giants without any conflicts of interest. I grew up in Tom Brady's hometown in Northern California. 
Sparks fly at UN Security Council meeting
Rivalry between China and US fuels friction in tech sector
The US is not the only country with a debt ceiling
Boston Bruins make history by besting their bitter Canadian rivals
The risk of contagion
The Czechs and the Brits are crashing the global baseball party
A new name for Turkey
German team’s gesture of silence
New discoveries of ancient Egypt
International baseball
UN General Assembly preview
Relief for staff shortages may be coming soon
Stubborn inflation
No more travel testing 
In other news
A costly party in the sky
Where’s my stuff?
Update on Haiti kidnappings
Maryland couple suspected of spying
Switzerland says ‘yes’ to same-sex marriage
Afghan who helped the US military makes it to safety
Hiding in Kabul
Long talkers
In Australia’s lockdown, a plea for a singles social bubble 
‘Where’s my stuff?’
New Mavericks mascot
IOC announces climate goals 
Remembering Argentina’s soccer legend Diego Maradona
people at building entrance
Economics
The risk of banking ‘contagion’ 
A translators booth overlooks the empty General Assembly hall at United Nations headquarters ahead of the General Assembly, Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.
Leaders
‘Every country gets a voice:’ World leaders convene at annual UN meeting
About one-third of the staff at the Stoneacre restaurants in Newport, Rhode Island, is from overseas.
Jobs
Hospitality industries in the US struggle to find workers, but international labor is ticking up
Taliban fighters stand guard in front of the Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 16, 2021.
Afghanistan
This Afghan man who helped US Army Special Forces pleads for help to escape the Taliban: ‘They will kill us’
Shipping containers are stacked in the Port of New York and New Jersey in Elizabeth, New Jersey, May 20, 2021.
Business, Economics and Jobs
‘Where’s my stuff?’ Here’s why global supply chains are out of whack due to pandemic
A man is shown wearing a dark-color vest and carrying a large garbage bag full of plastic bottles.
How to solve the plastic waste problem: Build a better plastic
The front of an electric bus is shown with green, blue and white stripes.
China dominates the electric bus market, but the US is getting on board
The Mississippi River near New Orleans, Louisiana.
Environment
The Mississippi: Pushed to the brink
About 15,000 robots named “Pepper” are used in Japanese and European banks, fast service restaurants, and healthcare settings. Pepper is now in US bank branches too — HSBC has them in select locations to help answer basic customer questions.
Science & Technology
Will the next wave of humanoid robots make our lives better — or steal our jobs?
Homeowners can connect solar panels to batteries in their garage, this one from the Bay Area company Sunrun, to help power much of their homes during times of peak electricity demand.
Energy
Here comes the sun (storage)
Retired engineer Robert Ozarski invented a device to easily raise and lower bikes from a ceiling. He invested $250,000 out of his retirement savings to start his company, Kradl, but isn’t sure about the future of his startup due to the US-China trade war.
Business, Economics and Jobs
How the US-China trade war hurts American entrepreneurs
Mick Jagger, left, and guitarist Keith Richards perform during the kick-off show of the Rolling Stones' "No Filter" tour at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. June 21, 2019.
Environment
Mick Jagger wants you to stop throwing away your plastic cups
a custom vw beetle in mexico
Culture
Goodbye, old friend: VW Beetle ceases production
This spring, passengers on a morning flight on Qantas Airways in Australia were greeted in an unusual way: They were on board the world's first waste-free flight. 
Environment
This Australian airline invites you to ‘sit back and enjoy the world’s first zero-waste flight’
A green cardboard box sits on a door stoop.
Environment
Want to help the planet? Ditch your grocery cart for a meal kit.
President Trump is visiting Japan this weekend, a foil of his back in the 1980’s. Trump would rail about a mounting US trade deficit with Japan, arguing that the Japanese were taking advantage of the US.
Trump administration
Long before bashing China on trade, Trump teed off on Japan
Multiple white windmills dot the blue ocean.
Climate Change
America’s windiest spot looks to harness the ocean winds with some British help
A container ship at the port of New Orleans. China is the US’ largest trading partner — the US imported $540 billion worth of goods from China last year.
Trump says trade wars are ‘easy to win.’ (They’re not.)
Burger King patrons in St. Louis were greeted by a somewhat confusing menu: A Whopper with no beef.
Food
The meatless Whopper’s ‘Impossible’ goal: To save the planet
Downtown Atlanta
Environment
How Atlanta plans to get to 100% green energy by 2035
Syrian refugee, Malik Alarmash, left, speaks with Clarkston Mayor Ted Terry, right, at the Refuge Coffee Shop in Clarkston, Georgia. Stephanie Steinbrecher with the Sierra Club, center, listens.
Climate Change
Legally, ‘climate refugees’ don’t exist. But in Georgia, they say they’re already here.
A customer pushes her shopping cart, filled with Chinese-made products, after making a purchase at a Target in Chicago, Illinois.
Business, Economics and Jobs
Who’s paying for Trump’s tariffs? China, or American shoppers?
Gonzaga forward Rui Hachimura dunks the basketball against Saint Mary's during the first half in the finals of the WCC Basketball Championships in Las Vegas, March 12, 2019.
Say you watched him when: Can Japan’s best basketball player lead Gonzaga to a championship?
Rayben Tamayo stands in front of the ice cream counter for his summer employer, the Hot Chocolate Sparrow on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The owners put up a Philippine flag to honor their many seasonal summer employees.
US government to Filipino seasonal workers: No visas this year
Seattle Mariners' outfielder Ichiro Suzuki gives autographs to fans before an exhbition game in Tokyo against the Yomiuri Giants, March 17, 2019.
Is Japan’s greatest baseball player about to take his final bow?
Illinois is the nation’s second-largest corn producer. President Trump says negotiations with China will send “a lot” more corn there, but farmers want details. And, they want tariffs removed on other commodities, which have dramatically hurt agricultural
A major deadline in the US-China trade war just came and went. Can Trump make a deal?
A pile of soybeans is hoisted in the air
Despite Trump’s promises, the US trade deficit with China continues to grow