Adriene Hill is a multimedia reporter for the Marketplace sustainability desk, with a focus on consumer issues and the individual relationship to sustainability and the environment. Hill also fills in as host for Marketplace Morning Report and Marketplace Tech Report, when needed.

Hill joined Marketplace in 2010 and helped cover the BP oil spill as well as work on one of Marketplace’s most successful and popular online features “Future Jobs-O-Matic.”  Hill’s biggest job satisfaction is being able to ask really smart people all sorts of questions.

Prior to joining Marketplace, Hill worked at WBEZ (Chicago Public Radio) first as an intern, then producer of the local show Eight Forty-Eight, then news desk editor and reporter. 

Hill has received numerous awards for her contribution to a project she worked on at WBEZ called “Inside & Out.” They include: Associated Press Illinois – Best Investigative Series and Best Series/Documentary; Lisagor awards – Online Investigative Reporting and Public Affairs Programming; Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi – Public Service Award; RTDNA Murrow Awards – Best Continuing Coverage; and PRNDI National – Best Multi-Media Presentation, First Place Enterprise/Investigative, First Place Series.

Hill is a graduate of Amherst College where she was a double major and earned her bachelor’s degree in political science and economics. She also received her master’s degree in political science from Northwestern University.

A native of Celo, N.C., Hill currently resides in Los Angeles where the weather is really as good as people say it is. In her spare time, she likes to hike, cook and sew.

Features By Adriene Hill

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Invisible Children continues anti-Kony campaign

The group is set to release a follow-up to the controversial video that went viral last month, calling for action against Joseph Kony.
Posted In: Invisible Children, Kony 2012
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Car companies come roaring back

March sales were up at General Motors, Chrysler and Toyota. But as the industry gets back up to speed, engineers aren't so easy to find.
Posted In: Auto, employment, Jobs
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Natural gas prices hit 10-year lows

The changing natural gas market is forcing big changes to the U.S. economy.
Posted In: natural gas
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Insurers keep close eye on extreme weather report

The IPCC is about to release its latest findings regarding extreme weather trends and climate change. The predictions can help insurers figure out what to cover, and for how much.
Posted In: weather, climate change, insurance
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The L.A. Dodgers deal: What $2 billion gets you

The Los Angeles Dodgers break a record in the off-season.
Posted In: Sports, Dodgers, baseball
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U.N. hopes to limit foreign farmland investment

The U.N. wants limits on the amount of farmland foreign investors can buy up around the world. The organization will vote on new voluntary guidelines in mid-May.
Posted In: farms, United Nations, food security
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Getting gasoline to the East Coast

Obama may waive a law so that foreign ships can transport gas from the Gulf of Mexico to the East Coast to ease shortages and lower prices.
Posted In: cargo, ports, gasoline
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Tebow on the blocks

Quarterback Payton Manning heads for Denver, which leaves the popular but uneven Tebow in football purgatory.
Posted In: football, Sports, NFL, Tim Tebow, Peyton Manning
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How President Obama handled the recovery

A new book explains why the Obama administration didn't go far enough to encourage economic recovery.
Posted In: stimulus, President Obama, recovery, recession
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Residential rental market is booming

Some would-be home buyers are unable to get loans for new places, but people who are getting back to work as the economy improves still want to move out of their parent's basement.
Posted In: Housing, rental, real estate, commercial real estate

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