Cristina Quinn

Cristina Quinn is Boston-based journalist and producer.

I'm a Boston-based journalist and producer but my jones to make radio started while living in Japan 2001-2004. I was asked to host a weekly program called, "Let's English!" for FM Aizu.

It was my first taste of producing and since no one at the station spoke English, it was entirely up to me to decide how to format 15 minutes of civic news in English and make it my own. There was no turning back after that.

Stateside I've worked as Weekend Edition news host at WGBH in Boston and was the station's first midday host.

My reporting has taken me to prison, the virtual world, long election nights and, of course, bad snow storms. My stories have also aired on NPR and PRI's Innovation Hub.

When I'm not reporting, I take part in elaborate dance parties and fort-making with my toddler daughter.

Almost Asian

'Almost Asian' is a hilarious look at dealing with adult-onset identity issues

Hollywood doesn't think Katie Malia is Asian enough. Or white enough. So the aspiring actress made this web series as her own comic relief.

'Almost Asian' is a hilarious look at dealing with adult-onset identity issues
Diabetes test

'Implicit bias' may account for a glaring disparity in health care screening

'Implicit bias' may account for a glaring disparity in health care screening
Mohammad Sayed

This teen is creating the first Afghan, wheelchair-bound superhero

This teen is creating the first Afghan, wheelchair-bound superhero
A prompt to get an art therapy session started.

A promising way to help vets, with poetry, painting, even latch hooking rugs

A promising way to help vets, with poetry, painting, even latch hooking rugs
The World

Rapper Kohh shows a side of Japan that is often ignored

Rapper Kohh shows a side of Japan that is often ignored
The “Journal of Visualized Experiments,” or JOVE, is used to ensure that experiments are able to be reproduced by other scientists.

This new scientific journal is kind of like YouTube, but without the cats

Each year, a couple hundred billion dollars are wasted on scientific experiments that can't be reproduced. And if they can't be reproduced, it's almost as if they didn't happen. Scientist Moshe Pritsker has tried to figure out a way to reduce that failure rate.

This new scientific journal is kind of like YouTube, but without the cats