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Sitara Nieves

Executive director, on demand

Sitara Nieves is the former executive director of the on-demand team at Marketplace. She ran podcasts, video and voice-on-demand here at Marketplace! She worked with a growing team of brilliant and creative people to launch new shows and series, and expand Marketplace's audiences across platforms. What was your very first job? Cashier at a KFC In your next life, what would your career be? Pastry chef, bar owner, or owner of a bar that serves great pastries. Fill in the blank: Money can’t buy you happiness, but it can buy you ______. A great cup of coffee. Which is pretty close to happiness. What’s the favorite item in your workspace and why? The big glass windows where I plan out projects and launches on many, many yellow sticky notes.

Latest from Sitara Nieves

  • Apr 11, 2019

    Supply

    Lt. Ryan Phillips of the Wise County sheriff's office drives through Appalachia, Virginia, on Friday, Dec. 7, 2018. Phillips has seen the opioid epidemic up close as a law enforcement officer and life-long resident of Wise County. "I knew them [persons suffering addiction] before they got addicted, so I know they're not just some dope head," he said.
    Julia Rendleman/Marketplace

    It’s not easy being an undercover cop in a county of just 40,000 people. But drugs were making it hard for Bucky Culbertson to run his business, so he made it his business to get rid of drugs.

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  • A homemade sign says "Think drugs gets you high give God a try," on a front lawn in Big Stone Gap, Virginia. The town in Wise County has been hit hard by the opioid epidemic.
    Julia Rendleman/Marketplace

    It’s the deadliest drug epidemic our country has ever faced. We go to ground zero, where “nothing changes except for the drug.”

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  • Mar 28, 2019

    Sentencing

    Keith Jackson's former home in northeast Washington, D.C.
    Jared Soares/Marketplace

    The drug bust and the trial were a “farce,” but the full force of the law still came down on Keith Jackson — and thousands of people like him. That didn’t end the crack epidemic, so what did?

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  • Washington DC's Spingarn High School, where Keith Jackson attended before his arrest, November 2018. 
    Jared Soares/Marketplace

    One day, early in the semester, Keith Jackson didn’t show up to class. He’d been arrested for selling crack, but for his classmates, that wasn’t the surprising part.

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  • President George H.W. Bush addressing the nation on Sept. 5, 1989. The president illustrated the threat of drugs by holding up a baggie of crack he said had been seized across the street from the White House.
    Courtesy: George Bush Presidential Library and Museum

    It was the perfect political prop: drugs seized by government agents right across the street from the White House, just in time for a big presidential address. The reality was more complicated.

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  • The third season of "The Uncertain Hour" starts March 21.
    George Bush Presidential Library and Museum and Tony Wagner/Marketplace

    Thirty years ago, President George H.W. Bush held up a baggie of crack on live TV, and said it had been seized right in front of the White House. The Uncertain Hour’s third season looks at how the policies launched that day continue to reverberate – even as the crack epidemic has faded into history. New episodes start March 21.

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  • Investors monitor screens showing stock market movements at a brokerage house in Shanghai on Thursday.
    Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images

    China has set a lower value for its yuan currency for the third straight day.

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  • The Wall Street bronze Bull looks out to an empty Broadway in Lower Manhattan, N.Y.
    STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images

    Some of the Marketplace's most noteworthy stories from the past week.

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