Sasa Woodruff
News DirectorWhen I was a University of Utah freshman, I marched up the hill to KUER to hand deliver a $20 check. The receptionist was so excited a teen listened (and donated!) to public radio that she told me to call the news director for an internship. I did and I've been working in media ever since.
I moved to Boise in the fall of 2019 to run the Boise State Public Radio newsroom as news director. I help shape the local stories you hear with a phenomenal team of reporters and hosts.
When I’m not thinking about audio, I’m in the kitchen fermenting cabbages or persimmons and attempting puff pastry or cream puffs. Dosas, Dutch babies and hashbrowns still elude me. For the record, I was into sourdough before it was COVID cool. Oh, and I don’t have a stomach.
If you'd like to get in touch, sasawoodruff@boisestate.edu.
-
A new plant and soil health center is opening Tuesday and will help researchers study fruit growing, plant pathology and microbiology.
-
The plant gets its color — and a boost in antioxidants — from genes from an edible flower. It's the first time gardeners have been able to grow a GMO crop at home.
-
Organic materials in landfills is a major contributor to methane emissions, but keeping things like grass clippings, apple cores or paper products out of the regular waste stream is a win for reducing greenhouse gases.
-
The State of Idaho issued a death warrant for 73-year-old convicted murderer, Thomas Eugene Creech.
-
On Saturday, Oct. 14, an annular solar eclipse will be viewable throughout the continental United States. We have some tips on how to watch it safely
-
Screech, the white peacock, showed up almost two decades ago and has become a fixture of a Boise-Bench neighborhood.
-
Eleven aboard a YMCA summer camp bus are injured on Highway 55
-
The Blaine County Sheriff is issuing a mandatory evacuation order for parts of Hailey.
-
Global demand for potatoes is spiking prices for Idaho's largest crop export, but supply is having a hard time keeping up.
-
New carbon dating shows point spears found in Idaho are thought to be the oldest known weapons in North America