Skip to main content

Patricia Murphy

Host

About

Patricia Murphy is the host of Seattle Now, a daily news podcast.

Her interviews focus on experts and newsmakers. Previously, you could find Patricia on the beat reporting on military and veteran affairs, justice, and health.

In 2018 Patricia received a regional Edward R. Murrow award for a series about the motivations of young people who carry guns. In 2005 she received a national Edward R. Murrow award for her reporting on injection drug use.

Though her first job in news was throwing hard copies of the Sunday paper from her bike, Patricia also graduated from Emerson College with a B.S. in Communications.

Location: Seattle

Languages: English

Pronouns: she/her

Professional Affiliations: Dart Center, Ochberg Society for Trauma Journalism

Podcasts

Stories

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    The U District is back

    As students return to classes and a new light rail station opens, the bustle is coming back to the University District.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Keeping the ferry boats afloat

    If you’ve taken a state ferry lately, there’s a good chance you were waiting a while. Delays and cancellations have frustrated passengers all summer. KUOW’s Noel Gasca tells us what’s been slowing down the boats, and how a new high school is trying to help keep things running.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    The magical murals of Henry

    You’ve seen Ryan Henry Ward’s murals around town: A walrus riding a bike. A sasquatch hugging a salmon. A salmon drinking coffee. There’s lots of whimsy and joy in Henry’s work, and as KUOW’s Anna Boiko-Weyrauch explains, he worked hard to find it.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    South Seattle Emerald's Marcus Harrison Green

    If nothing else, this pandemic has given us a spotlight on some of society's biggest problems. Today, a conversation about how we can be part of the solution, with South Seattle Emerald publisher Marcus Harrison Green. He writes about the power of turning inward for answers to some of our most complex challenges in his new book, Readying to Rise.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Casual Friday: 764-HERO to zero

    Washington hangs up its hotline for reporting HOV lane cheats. Seattle drivers are honking more. And it's officially fall, so get your daylight while you still can.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    How will the city's eviction ban end?

    Seattle's next mayor will have to decide how and when the city unwinds its pandemic evictions ban, because Mayor Durkan just extended it to January. How does this end? And where is the money that's supposed to be helping people out? Seattle Times real estate reporter Heidi Groover explains.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    A long road home

    Stable, permanent housing is at the heart of every long-term solution to the city’s homelessness crisis. KUOW’s Casey Martin tells us how it happened for one Seattleite who’d been homeless for a decade.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    When will M's fans see October baseball?

    The Mariners have 14 games left to play and about a one-percent chance of making the postseason... something they haven’t done since the iPod was invented 20 years ago. We get a pep talk from M’s announcer Rick Rizzs.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Casual Friday: Thirsty for fall

    After a dusty, dry summer, Seattleites are in for more rain in one weekend than we got in three months. Microsoft learns remote work means longer workdays. And Macklemore moves from the thrift shop to the pro shop.

  • DO NOT USE THIS ONE Seattle Now logo

    Remembering the pandemic through objects

    While the pandemic is still raging, there are efforts to ensure we never forget how it has altered our lives. The Washington State History Museum is collecting artifacts (both tangible and digital) to commemorate how Washingtonians have experienced Covid. Head curator Margaret Wetherbee talks about the items they've collected so far and why it's important to document the pandemic while it's still happening.