Michael Skoler

Former general manager, PRI.org

Michael Skoler is the former general manager of PRI.org, where he helped connect smart and passionate journalists with smart and passionate audiences.

After an early career mistake of leaving Paris and the French wine trade, I recovered by becoming a reporter.I've written for magazines like Glamour (where I was the only male on staff for a brief time), reported on science and tech for WGBH-TV, covered Somalia, Rwanda and South Africa as NPR's Africa correspondent, created online games like BudgetHero, and started the Public Insight Network of citizen sources that many newsrooms use today.Along the way, I earned an MBA and have lived in France, Kenya and Mexico.


Women from St. Louis area protest Donald Trump comments on women

Millennials get their political say during week-long UnConvention in NYC

Election 2016

Actor and former Daily Show comedian Aasif Mandvi kicks off a week of live and streamed UnConvention events in New York City focused on the voices, views and issues concerning millennial voters in the 2016 election.

Portraits of women around the globe

When a country has problems, women are often the answer

Justice
David Beard

Say hello to PRI.org’s new executive editor, David Beard

Media
Kissing protest in Kerala, India

Indians stage a protest for the right to kiss

Global Scan
Greek Tomb at Amphipolis

Greeks wonder who was buried in this huge tomb 2300 years ago

Global Scan
Blood Bucket Challenge video

European youth have started the #BloodBucketChallenge

Global Scan

After the success of the Ice Bucket Challenge that swept YouTube, European young people are hoping for viral success with a campaign to bring world attention back to the conflict on Ukraine’s eastern border. Meanwhile, killing is the subject of newly-published scientific research. In this case, the killers, though, are chimps. And a Chinese tennis star retires in her 30s, having brought tennis and a bit of sports freedom to her home country, in this weekend’s Global Scan.

Airline meal

Now you can have airline food without leaving the ground

Global Scan

Frequent fliers at least get points for suffering through airline cuisine. Soon Germans will get the option of having it delivered to their homes. And what does a business class meal cost on the ground? About $12. Newly-released files from Britain’s National Archives confirm that the country’s WWII spies had to pass a seduction test by “special agent” Fifi. And 50 South Koreans will experience an oxymoron — competitive relaxation. All that in today’s Global Scan.

MIT robo-cheetah

MIT researchers create a robo-cheetah that runs and jumps off-leash

Global Scan

It’s not much of a looker when it comes to feline curves, but MIT’s robotic cheetah sure can run. It is novel in both its motors and the math that calculates how hard it springs across uneven terrain. In Scotland, bankers are preparing for the worst — a run on banks if Scots vote “yes” to separate from Britain on Thursday. And we look at the sexy brewing device for coffee that was a favorite of James Bond and is coming back into fashion. All that in today’s Global Scan.

Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko compared to mountains

Just how big is that comet the European Space Agency is going to land on?

Global Scan

Out in space, comets don’t seem that big compared to planets and all. But this chunk of rock and ice would rival the tallest mountains we know. Some have even created photos showing how it would tower over Los Angeles. Meanwhile in Australia, a Pizza Hut makes a major PR gaffe when it decides to throw in a free pet with every large pizza order. And the American-raised son of a terrorist decides to tell his story. All in this edition of the Global Scan.

Malala Yousafzai at the UN

Pakistan says it has captured the men who shot Malala in 2012

Global Scan

When Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head two years ago, the Taliban in Pakistan claimed responsibility. On Friday, the Pakistan army said it had caught a gang of 10 men behind the attack. Elsewhere in Pakistan, a new branch of al-Qaeda seems to have bungled its first attack, but wants the press coverage anyway. And a 45-story skyscraper of squatters is being cleared in Venezuela, all in this weekend’s Global Scan.