
Taylor Jennings-Brown
Taylor Jennings-Brown is a 2021-2022 Kroc Fellow. She is a thoughtful writer from Durham, North Carolina and is a spring 2021 graduate from the University of South Carolina, where she received her bachelor's degree in mass communications and anthropology.
Her lifelong passion for storytelling and advocacy brought her to journalism through her university's official student magazine, where she began as a writer and worked her way up to managing editor. Although writing is her first love, Jennings-Brown has since become an audio storytelling enthusiast.
A social butterfly in nature and creative at heart, she enjoys laughing with friends or doing arts & crafts in her free time.
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With fewer assets to erode, and flexibility to change jobs, Gen Z is positioned well for inflation, but that's not how they're seeing it.
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In a new memoir, Lisa McNair recounts growing up in Birmingham, Ala., after her sister Denise and three other Black girls were murdered in the 1963 Ku Klux Klan bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church.
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Millions of students have received federal aid through the Pell Grant. NPR wants to hear about how the money affected your college experience.
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A bonus Heaux Tales track, "Hurt Me So Good" narrates the perils of staying in a relationship bad enough to make you question your worth but just good enough to make you stay despite the drama.
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Pink Sweat$ explores the notion that one doesn't need sacred text or church pews to have a spiritual encounter.
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You can't help but bop your head with maybe a teary eye as Key Glock mourns Young Dolph in this rap memorial.
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Hair salons have long been a safe space for Black women. And that doesn't seem to have changed despite all the havoc wreaked by the COVID-19 pandemic.