INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Here at Kitchen Central, located on the edge of San Francisco’s North Beach and Chinatown district, The Kitchen Sisters offer an internship program where individuals from various ages and backgrounds come to learn more about the inner workings of producing radio stories. The program ranges from storytelling and editing workshops to the production of stories and excursions outside of the office.
The Kitchen Sisters welcome internship inquiries. If you are interested please send us an email with your resume and tell us something about yourself, your skills, your goals and your objectives with regards to working with us. We do not have any employment opportunities available at this time but we welcome your query and keep all resumes on file for future projects and needs. Please contact us directly for details about our workshop / master class sessions.
Meet Some of our Present and Former Interns and See Their Work:
Teddy Alexander joined The Kitchen Sisters as an intern in November, 2019. A California native, Teddy attended UC Santa Cruz, where she studied Sociology. She currently works for REFORM Alliance, a criminal justice non-profit led by Van Jones. Teddy is an aspiring journalist and audio storyteller, and part-time local comedian. She has a recognizable voice, and even in her home town has been accused of having an accent. Follow Teddy’s work on her website: http://deetsa.com/audio/ |
Matt Hoisch landed in the idyllic Kearny St. office after spending six months researching and writing about a plethora of topics in a post-college employment whirlwind. Through all of that time, he knew he had to find his way back to radio. About two years earlier, he had decided he wanted to become a radio journalist, and if there’s anyone from whom to learn and hone the art radio journalism, it’s The Kitchen Sisters (and Brandi and Nathan). Matt spent college studying environmental issues, so it was fitting that as an intern, he sifted through and edited hours of tape from a conference on climate change and agriculture at Al Gore’s Tennessee farm.
Matt knows that there is something valuable that the peculiar medium of audio storytelling can teach us about climate change and our environment. He hasn’t figured out exactly what, but this internship was a great step in that quest. After his time in the kitchen, Matt jumped away for his first professional (and paid) job in radio as a reporter with KOTO, the public radio station in Telluride, CO, where he learned the art of daily deadlines and skiing on the weekends. Other interests include playing piano, Israeli folk dancing, and telling himself that he will learn to be a better cook. While in Telluride he has covered everything form Spanish Spelling Bees to Ukulele Jam Sessions. |
Josh Gross is an adventure seeker and storyteller raised in the Bay Area. He began producing audio stories throughout his high school years, and joined the Kitchen Sisters in January 2019 after finishing his piece, The Other F-Word, an NPR Youth Radio Challenge Finalist. When he isn’t telling stories, he is climbing rocks (with ropes), baking an array of pastries and breads, or surfing the great pacific ocean.
You can hear Josh’s work, including The Other F-Word, on our podcast episode, Night of the Living Intern: First Stories from Kitchen Sisters Interns |
Selene Ross is fascinated by all things weird and wonderful, particularly when it comes to stories. Inspired by creative and innovative mediums for storytelling, she has curated and developed stories and exhibitions for virtual reality, independent podcasts, spoken word poetry, and performance art. She cooked in the Kitchen back in 2018, and now is an audio producer at Dipsea, an audio platform for short audio fiction about sex and relationships. At Dipsea, she and the other “sonic sisters” work closely with voice actors and sound designers to bring the stories to life. Hear more of her work here and at dipseastories.com. |
Juliette Luini is an independent audio producer enjoying 300 days of sunshine in Boulder, CO. Her work draws inspiration from documentary, narrative journalism, and oral storytelling. She is a recent graduate of the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies and Middlebury College. When she isn’t producing podcasts, you can find Juliette procrastibaking banana bread, practicing yoga, or hiking with friends.
Her work can be heard here:: |
Kenny Gong arrived at KS HQ during a wonderful sojourn of creative self-discovery. Before the season cooking in the Kitchen, Kenny was a social justice organizer, politico, nonprofit fundraiser, television producer, and baker. Since the Kitchen, Kenny built a top-ranking San Francisco real estate sales business and, today, is a Realtor trainer, speaker, and host of The Thoughtful Realtor podcast. Kenny lives in North Berkeley and is an active member of the KQED Public Media Community Advisory Panel. Website: www.ConnieAndKenny.com. |
Eliza Smith is a producer at Snap Judgment. She also works with authors to adapt their work into radio plays for Snap. She is also the senior producer on their first spin-off podcast, Spooked. |
Laura Klivans is a health reporter at KQED public radio and a lecturer at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism. |
David Fuchs – David first stumbled into the kitchen in October 2015 and returned as a full-fledged intern the following summer. Although he’s a third-generation Northern Californian, he was first bit by the radio bug while working as a Narrative Journalism Fellow at Middlebury College in Vermont. His work as a radio producer and print journalist has been featured on KWMR, WDEV and Middlebury Magazine and in The Tiburon Ark, The Addison Independent and Vermont Sports Magazine. As a rising senior, he hopes to combine his passion for journalism and background in geography to produce compelling stories that tie individual narratives into larger geographic contexts. When he’s not working on a story, you’ll most likely find him honking on the sax, bouncing around in the waves or tracking down the perfect burrito. David produced the Russian Hidden Kitchen story The Apple Road while interning with us. Links to his prior work in radio, print and — per Nikki’s request — skateboarding can be found here, here and here, respectively. |
Patty Fung, nicknamed the “roving eye” here at Kitchen Central, is a hobby photographer, documentarian, and explorer. Her personal work ranges from capturing the in betweens of the day to documenting the projects of non-profit organizations. She’s a Bay Area native and recent graduate from the University of California, Santa Cruz where she studied environmental studies and education. Other than tinkering with different mediums during her free time, she enjoys reading, crafting, and riding her skateboard all over the place. Photo by Kenny Srivijittakar. Website: pfungcollects.wordpress.comStories Produced for the Kitchen Sisters: Ghada Abdel-Aal: Egyptian Pharmacist/Blogger/Writer Haitian Amputee Mother’s Alliance Across the Great Divide: Photography of Roberta Price Deborah Luster: Tooth for an Eye |
Sam Robinson graduated in July 2010 from the University of the Arts, London with a bachelors degree in Sound Art and Design. During his time at University he created the London ‘Sonic Tube Map’ (2009) a computer-based application which enables users to create their own unique audio journey through London. In 2010 as part of an extensive body of work based around sound sampling he created ‘BUSK’, an audio-visual project performed by improvising with a sampler containing audio sourced from street performers. Sam’s sound work has been heard on BBC Radio and London art-radio station Resonance FM. He enjoys writing, producing music and performing music. In summer 2010 he moved from his home in south London to San Francisco and has had the pleasure of working with the Kitchen Sisters since January 2011. Website:www.kalou.co.uk Stories Produced for the Kitchen Sisters: Never On Sunday: The Hidden World Of Elena Fonseca My Mother Deborah Luster: Tooth for an Eye |
Matt Beagle started interning with the Kitchen Sisters in 2011. Before coming to the Kitchen, Matt worked as a labor organizer, a camp counselor and a producer for “White Collar Brawler,” an online documentary about boxing. In 2010, Matt participated in the Coro Fellows Program in Public Affairs, and wore a lot of ties. Matt is also a stand up comedian and can be seen telling jokes about his parents in local bars. Website: mbeagle.wordpress.comStories Produced for the Kitchen Sisters: Deborah Luster: Tooth for an Eye |
Thalia Gigerenzer started interning with the Kitchen Sisters in May 2011. Coming from a background in print journalism, she loves hunting for untold and offbeat stories. She’s written about everything from communist nostalgia in East Germany, Islamic iPhone apps to the local shoe repairman. Her work has been published in The Bay Citizen, The New York Times, Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung and India’s The Caravan. Thalia grew up in Berlin, Germany. After graduating from the University of Chicago, she spent a year in India on a Fulbright scholarship, where she documented the life stories of the residents of a poor, working-class neighborhood in Delhi. As a passionate documentarian of hidden histories, she’s very excited to be part of the Kitchen family. Website: thaliagig.wordpress.com |
Tess Kenner graduated from U.C. Berkeley, where she studied History and Spanish. After graduation, she returned to her home town, Los Angeles, where she worked on the documentary film Food Inc., and on a documentary special about social networking. She spent several months in Rome, cooking at the American Academy’s Rome Sustainable Food Project. She joined the Kitchen Sisters in the summer of 2010. She loves being apart of Kitchen Central! |
Lacy Roberts is a budding radio producer from the Big Sky State of Montana. After graduating from Brown University, she relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area and was surprised to find that lemons could grow in her backyard. In January. Her work has been heard on YouthCast, a growing handful of quality NPR stations around the country, and her podcast, The Ladies Village Improvement Society. Though its currently on hiatus, you can hear episodes from the first season on lvisradio.org. She is now helping out in Kitchen Central with the Sisters’ upcoming series on young women around the world and working on some sound projects of her own. Surely more revelations await as the California seasons proceed… fig trees? quince? Who knew?Website: www.lacyroberts.comStories Produced for the Kitchen Sisters: A War Bride’s Story Kakenya’s Dream The Hidden World of Vivian Mair |
Marie Doezema has been working as a print journalist for ten years in France, Japan, Qatar and the U.S. After graduating from Vassar College, Marie cut her teeth on a Paris-based literary journal while studying Arabic and working in a wine bar. Recent work has appeared in The Asahi Shimbun/International Herald Tribune, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, and Paris/LA. Eager to blend sound into her stories, Marie came to San Francisco in the summer of 2009 to learn from The Kitchen Sisters. In addition to writing, editing and radioing, Marie is at work on a collaborative photo-journalism project about global remittance workers. |
Lisa Morehouse came to radio after 14 years in public education, teaching English and journalism in rural Georgia and San Francisco, and learning from her students’ stories. Since 2007 she’s been writing about education (Edutopia, McSweeney’s) and producing radio stories. Her pieces on travelling Samoan circuses, butchery classes, and art in unlikely places have aired on shows like KQED’s The California Report and NPR’s All Things Considered. She feels lucky to be a line cook in the Kitchen. Website: lisamorehouse.blogspot.com/ |
Rachel Scott is a native of Santa Cruz County and graduated from U.C. Santa Cruz with a degree in Sociology. She has been a part of the KZSC Santa Cruz community for over three years, where she has hosted a variety of music programs and served on the governing board. She is passionate about music, ethnic cuisine, traveling, and exploring socio-historical topics through film and radio. As the former guitarist in an all-female rock band, Rachel is thrilled to be part of a team that celebrates female culture and history. Website: thirdhandnews.wordpress.com |
Alexandra Blair, graduate from Brown University, has been working for the PRBO Conservation Science in Point Reyes, Ca. as their Environmental Education and Outreach assistant. She has worked in Cuba and with Tibetan refugees in northern India and created documentary shorts for Brown University’s “Inside Out” student radio station. |
Other former Kitchen Sisters interns include:
Annie Brown
Allie Cheroutes
Maira Clancy
Ros Fraser
Marina Furbush
Paulina Hartono
Ocie Henderson
Milo Henderson
Ethan Hofmayer
Lucy Kang
Zoe Kurland
Virginia Tasca Lanza
Morgan Levey
Allison Levitsky
Vickie Ly
Paul McCarthy
Bayley McMillan
Chris Mosson
Brijean Murphy
Emma Nobel
Emily Shaw
Taylor Simmons
Justine Thieriot
Mary Franklin Harvin
Vika Arenson
Asal Ehsanipour
Aylia Renee Yates
Alicia Luu
Teddy Alexander
Olivia Ware
Lauren Schechter
Ethan Hofmayer
Katie McCutcheon
Michal Wisnioski
Emily Shaw
Grant McHamer