Caitlin Troutman
Talk Show ProducerCaitlin Troutman is a talk show producer at Iowa Public Radio. Before joining the talk show team, she worked as a Digital News Producer for IPR as well. Prior to working for IPR, she was a news producer at Maine Public and interned at KCUR in Kansas City, where she worked on the daily talk show Central Standard. She also hosted a music show at WMPG in Portland, Maine.
Caitlin earned a BA in Literature and Critical Theory from the Oxbridge Honors Program at William Jewell College before studying audio through the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies. Some of the odd jobs she held during this time include writing tutor, standardized patient and bagel salesperson.
Caitlin loves coffee, reading and live music. She is a dog and cat person.
You can contact Caitlin at ctroutman@iowapublicradio.org.
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More than one in 10 young adults in the country regularly turn to e-cigarettes.
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The bill, passed with the Senate voting 79 to 18, also includes a provision that could lead to a Tik Tok ban.
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Host Charity Nebbe speaks with expert readers and author Diane Wilson about her novel The Seed Keeper for the Talk of Iowa book club.
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Storms tore through parts of the Midwest this week, resulting in tornadoes in multiple states, including Iowa.
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The king of crab apples shares some of his favorite spring blooming trees and talk about why magnolias seem to be having an off year
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Economists say that traditional indicators are favorable, yet one in six Iowans has trouble making ends meet. Exploring the disconnect between good economic news and how Iowans experience the economy
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Frank Langfitt spent nearly two decades as an international correspondent reporting from more than 50 countries and territories. Now he covers threats to democracy at home and abroad as NPR’s global democracy correspondent.
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Leaving plant debris in your perennial garden all winter long provides texture and habitat, but now it’s time to do some spring cleaning as the weather warms.
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Leaving plant debris in your perennial garden all winter long provides texture and habitat, but now it’s time to do some spring cleaning as the weather warms.