Amy Quinton
Podcast Manager and Host
Amy Quinton is a News and Media Relations Specialist in Strategic Communications. When not handling media requests, you’ll find her writing about science, agriculture, and veterinary medicine at ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù.
She began her career in television as a reporter at stations in North Dakota and later Florida, but most of her career was spent as a public radio reporter. Amy worked for member stations in Washington, D.C.; Charlotte, North Carolina; New Hampshire, and Sacramento. Her stories have aired on , , , and . She even failed miserably in front of a huge audience during a quiz show on Science Friday.
Amy has traveled far and wide in search of a good story. As an environment reporter for more than a decade, her work has taken her , , and .
She's also hopped on the back of a tomato harvester in the California Central Valley, spent the day with a large-animal veterinarian doing pregnancy checks on dairy cows, and faced her biggest fear, bees — in pursuit of . She did not care how goofy she looked in a beekeeper suit.
Amy graduated from with a bachelor's degree in journalism and received her master's in journalism and public policy at in Washington, D.C.
Marianne Russ Sharp
Co-Host and Editor (Season 4)
Marianne is a news editor and senior public information officer at. She covers the, and you’ll often find her writing about the latest research into ADHD, autism, fragile X syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disabilities.
She worked as a journalist for 20 years, mostly in public radio, including nearly a decade at Sacramento’s. There, she served as capitol bureau chief, running the station’s statewide government news service, and later as managing editor. Her stories have aired on,, the and other outlets. She spent many late nights staking out budget meetings at the Capitol and chasing down lawmakers while covering the Schwarzenegger and Brown administrations.
Marianne worked as a reporter, talk show host, anchor and editor at other public radio stations around the country and was also a television news producer. As a , she worked in Germany, producing long-form radio stories for. One of her favorites was a short documentary on the role of graffiti in communities before and after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Prior to coming to ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù Health, Marianne worked at the for, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving early childhood literacy.
Marianne studied mass communications and political science and has a B.S. from. She also earned an M.S. in journalism from the at Ohio University.
Kat Kerlin
Co-host (Season 2 and 3)
Biobubbles, biodigesters, a carbon-free smart home, raising salmon in rice fields, and telling the world how a zebra got its stripes were all, literally, in a week’s work for Kat, environment writer and media relations specialist at ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù.
Some might think Kat’s beat could drive her to despair. After all, climate change, , endangered species and the end of the world as we know it aren’t exactly lighthearted subjects.
Yet she is routinely inspired by the work ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù faculty, staff and students are doing every day to apply science to some of the planet’s hardest problems.
They are landing rovers on Mars, healing mountain gorillas in Rwanda, finding zero-waste and zero-net-energy solutions, and she loves being able to tell their stories to a wider audience.
Kat joined ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù in 2011 after having spent a dozen years as an environmental journalist. She earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri.
She spent two years living in the Andes as a Peace Corps volunteer in Ecuador before making her way to California.
Alexa Renee
Producer and Co-host (Season 1)
When she was a teen, Alexa used to win yearbook mocks for "Most likely to be on TV." Fast forward a decade and the yearbook prophecies came true. Alexa spent some time working in local radio and television, both behind the scenes and in front of the camera and microphone. It wasn't until she landed a job as a digital news producer that she decided she preferred the internet aspect of media. But she also discovered she wanted to leave the broadcast industry for something similar, but outside of commercial news and radio.
One day, on a whim, she had the opportunity to come back to work in her hometown of Davis. In a full-circle move, she left the news business to continue working in the digital world for ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù.
When she's not at work, Alexa is usually at home in Sacramento, enjoying different wines carefully selected at many of the region's beautiful wineries while watching crime shows with terrible actors. Sometimes she decides to switch it up and binge-listens to crime podcasts. There is rarely a different genre she commits to unless it's Unfold.
Alexa studied broadcast electronic communication arts at San Francisco State University where she hosted her own radio show and of course, the rest is history.