
Michael Lee
Former ReporterMichael Lee joined WOSU in 2021, but was previously an intern at the station in 2018. He is a recent graduate from Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism where he obtained his master's degree, and an alumnus of Ohio State University.
Michael has previously worked as an intern at the Columbus Dispatch and most recently, the Chicago Sun-Times. He is also a member of the Asian American Journalists Association.
As a Central Ohio native, he is passionate about reporting on his home community, but also about strange oddities, like that one abandoned bridge that people are still wondering about.
-
It was the first day of classes at Columbus City Schools. Administrators and teachers welcomed students back full-time after a year of remote and hybrid learning.
-
Former Columbus lobbyist John Raphael was sentenced to one day in prison with three years of supervised release.
-
The City of Columbus will distribute $12.2 million in rental assistance to 26 local community organizations.
-
Ohio State University will officially roll out autonomous food delivery robots Monday for students to use on campus.
-
The documentary that ties the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium and former director Jack Hanna to the exotic animal trade will make its Columbus debut in September. The documentary's filmmaker and zoo officials addressed the film's controversy Thursday morning on WOSU's All Sides with Ann Fisher.
-
Columbus City Schools Superintendent Talisa Dixon addressed a number of COVID-19 safety requests from the district's teacher's union.
-
With Central Ohio K-12 schools starting throughout the month, each district is setting its own COVID-19 policies to make sure they can begin the year on the right foot.
-
Election day in a few months could bring new faces to city councils and school boards. But in some Central Ohio suburbs, candidates are looking to bring racial diversity to those boards.
-
PromoWest Productions will soon require proof of vaccination for those attending concerts in its venues.
-
The Franklin County Board of Commissioners will vote Thursday on an ordinance to approve the county's portion in the National Opioid Settlement.