
NPR Video Producer Bronson Arcuri got his first taste of public media at 51ĀŅĀ× and WOUB

When Bronson Arcuri left his hometown of Painesville, Ohio and came to 51ĀŅĀ× in the fall of 2006, he had no idea he would end up working in media as a video producer for NPR. In fact, he started school as a history major.
āI was not clear on what I wanted to do with my life,ā said Arcuri. āBefore classes even started, I switched to an aviation major. But after a bit, I decided that lifestyle wasnāt right for me. So, I went to my counselor and asked what I should do. I told the counselor how I liked making short films and comedy sketches with my friends in high school, and I ended up becoming a media management major.ā
Once that decision was made, things started to click for Arcuri.
āThrough the Work Study program, I started in a paid position at WOUB,ā said Arcuri. āI remember where I was when I found out that I got the job. I was walking down the path behind Lincoln Hall. The title of my WOUB position was associate producer, which I thought was a cool title and job, and I got to work in the development department.ā
Arcuri helped with fundraising and advertising initiatives at WOUB. He helped put together a video that was used during a WOUB TV pledge drive. Arcuri also remembers sitting in on business meetings which gave him a behind the scenes look at a professional media operation.
āI was doing all of this personal production with my friends, but I didnāt have a lot of business acumen,ā said Arcuri. āHaving a foot in that world with a real organization that was doing professional media business really lined me up well to work somewhere like NPR.ā
Arcuri says his WOUB experience also exposed him to the world of public media and the idea of mission-driven media.
āDr. Carolyn Lewis, who was WOUBās general manager at the time, was one of my professors, and she was so kind and generous with her time. She really believed in me. That sort of personality she had and her belief in a mission-driven communications organization really called to me.ā
After graduation, Arcuri went to New York and worked as a production assistant on TV shows and movies. But it wasnāt a good fit. Eventually a temp job opened up at NPR, and Arcuri jumped at it.
āThe temp job eventually turned permanent, which was wonderful. Iāve been at NPR for seven years now.ā In that time Arcuri has worked as a director for the Tiny Desk concert series, as well as a creator and director of the economics explainer video series Planet Money Shorts and the politics series Ronās Office Hours. Now heās a part of the leadership team developing news products for emerging platforms, including Instagram and TikTok. He also oversees NPRās video coverage of the war in Ukraine and manages short-form video production for All Things Considered, Life Kit, and NPRās international and political coverage.
Arcuri says he knows that many think working as a video producer for an audio/radio organization is a little strange. But in the new media world, he says NPRās expansion into video storytelling is vitally important to the public media mission.
āAs the media landscape is changing, weāre trying to expand as a media organization and part of that is video,ā said Arcuri. āIn the early 60ās FCC Chairman Newton Minow said, āWhen TV is good, nothing is better. When TV is bad, nothing is worse.ā Thatās Instagram and TikTok today. Itās where people are, and itās our job to meet them there with accurate and reliable programming.ā