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John O'Brien

Senior Producer, All Things Considered

About

John O’Brien is KUOW's All Things Considered Senior Producer. He spends his days setting up interviews with newsmakers on subjects from politics and public health to arts and culture. John learned to make radio starting in 2006 as an intern on KUOW’s The Conversation with Ross Reynolds.

Location: Seattle

Languages: English

Pronouns: he/him

Stories

  • canada canadian flag generic

    Hit back or leave it alone? Canadians respond to new Trump tariffs

    No deal is better than a bad deal. That appears to be the consensus among political and business leaders in Canada, after President Donald Trump applied new tariffs on Canadian imports that aren't covered by a 2018 free trade deal. While other countries rushed to make trade deals, Canadian leaders determined they could not agree to one — yet. To catch up with how all of this is being processed in British Columbia, and some other topics, KUOW’s Kim Malcolm talked to Vancouver-based journalist Michelle Eliot, who hosts the CBC weekday call in program BC Today.

  • caption: Aerial View of Bellingham, Washington including the waterfront redevelopment, downtown, and Mount Baker in the distance.

    Bellingham family moves forward after hate crime sentencing

    Washington state reports more hate crimes than most other states. We've ranked in the top five states since 2018, according to FBI statistics. In one case last summer, a 43-year-old man named Paul Bittner attacked an 11-year-old Bellingham boy who was walking back to school from a field trip. DeVante Blow is the boy's father. He talked to KUOW’s Kim Malcolm about the case.

  • caption: In this file photo, Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal talks with Libby Denkmann, host of Soundside, in KUOW's studio in Seattle on Nov. 6, 2024.

    Rep. Jayapal talks rescissions, protecting U.S. citizens from ICE, and the Epstein files

    Congressional Republicans gave President Trump a big win last week. The Senate and House passed his $9 billion rescission request along a mostly party-line vote. Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapal represents Washington's 7th District, in the Seattle area. She talked to KUOW’s Kim Malcolm about the rescission package, a new bill she sponsored last week, and other matters.

  • caption: The Washington state Capitol building is pictured on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, in Olympia, Wash.

    Washington’s DOL is sharing information with ICE. Are they using that data to deport people?

    In 2018, the Washington state Legislature passed a law that, among other things, prevents state agencies from sharing residents’ personal information with federal officials when it comes to immigration enforcement. It's part of a range of laws and policies that makes Washington a sanctuary state. A new investigation from KING 5 shows at least one state agency has quietly been sharing that kind of information with some Homeland Security agencies as deportations ramp up. KING 5 investigative reporter Kristin Goodwillie told KUOW’s Kim Malcolm about her reporting.

  • caption: Attorney Brittan Schwartz assists someone without representation after attending court with her client as observers sit nearby outside of an immigration courtroom at the Henry M. Jackson Federal Building in Seattle on Wednesday, July 9, 2025. 

    Fears of ICE arrests cause tension at Seattle immigration court

    At courthouses across the country, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have been arresting people who show up for required immigration court hearings. Seattle Times staff reporter Catalina Gaitán spent time at the Henry M. Jackson Federal Building in downtown Seattle yesterday, amid rumors ICE was planning to show up.

  • caption: Todd Torgeson kayaks from his home to where his truck is parked along on Francis Road, after flooding the previous day, on Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2023, in Clear Lake.

    Snohomish planners reflect on flood safety in wake of Texas tragedy

    The high death toll from the July 4 flood in Kerr County, Texas, has prompted questions about flood preparation across the country. Western Washington is one of the most flood-prone regions in the United States, according to the National Weather Service. To find out about preparations in Snohomish County, KUOW’s Paige Browning spoke to Emergency Management Director Lucia Schmit and Surface Water Management Director Gregg Farris.

  • caption: A paddle boarder crosses Portage Bay through heavy smoke from nearby wildfires on Sunday, August 20, 2023, in Seattle.

    As air quality worsens, UW scientist focuses on effects of wildfire smoke

    It’s been a relatively quiet wildfire season so far in the Pacific Northwest, with not much in the way of large fires or widespread smoke pollution — yet. But a recent study found that more frequent wildfires have been erasing air quality gains in the United States.