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Kelly Silvera

Executive Producer

Kelly is an award-winning journalist with more than 20 years of international experience. She’s traveled all over the world leading news coverage of history-making events. Her video-first reporting of global news stories including the Arab Spring has been recognized by the Emmys, George Foster Peabody, United Nations, New York Film Festivals and Britain’s Royal Television Society, among others. Kelly’s work gives the audience access to a range of perspectives while empowering people to tell their own stories. Throughout her career she has elevated underrepresented voices both in media coverage and the workplace. Kelly began her career at BBC London radio while studying journalism at University of the Arts London. Her extraordinary talent is running very fast in heels.

Latest from Kelly Silvera

  • Tech stocks rally, thanks to AI
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    Chip maker NVIDIA’s stocks have already risen 220% this year. What next? Plus, political turmoil could cause some Israelis to emigrate.

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  • Writer’s strike update
    Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images

    Over 100 days in, the WGA isn’t close to having a new contract. Plus, China’s property crisis has saddled local governments with enormous amounts of debt.

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  • India has imposed a 40% export duty on onions
    Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: India, the world’s largest onion exporter, has imposed a 40% export duty on onions. It’s an attempt to improve domestic availability and rein in soaring food price inflation. Israel’s political lurch to the right and its controversial plans to overhaul the justice system could be starting to have a direct impact on its population, with one in three Israelis now thinking of emigrating. India could make history if its third lunar mission successfully touches down near the moon’s south pole.

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  • Could there be an AI bubble?
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    Investors are piling money on new generative AI firms. How much is too much? Plus, the state of the Microsoft Activision acquisition in the U.K.

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  • At AMC, no more “preferred” stocks
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    The movie theater chain is consolidating their stocks in an unusual move that could dilute value but help with raising revenue. Plus, semiconductor chips.

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  • Will Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal finally get done?
    Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Microsoft has filed changes to its proposed takeover video game maker, Activision Blizzard, in an attempt to win over the U.K. competition regulator, which previously blocked the $69 billion deal. The BRICS group of developing economies — Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — are meeting in Johannesburg for their annual summit. Expanding membership and de-dollarization are both high on the agenda. Jakarta is the world’s most polluted city; the air quality is so bad, that from today, thousands of civil servants will work from home for the next two months.

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  • What’s with unlimited PTO?
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    Some workers love it, but others are taking less time off than they used to. Plus, the BRICS summit will tackle expansion and weaning off the U.S. dollar.

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  • Sustainable urban solutions
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    Could they help San Francisco, where pandemic recovery has been slow? Plus, global wealth inequality and the 2023 World Cup.

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  • Chinese yuan cash bills and the Chinese flag
    Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: China’s economy hasn’t bounced back from the pandemic and now its central bank is stepping in, cutting one of its key interest rates for the second time in three months. Protests over economic hardship in Syria’s southern province of Sweida are continuing and there are calls for President Bashar al-Assad to step down. As the most successful Women’s World Cup finishes, the infrastructure and facilities for the women’s game lags behind the enthusiasm.

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  • Who wants to work in tourism?
    Denis Lovrovic/AFP via Getty Images

    In Croatia, not enough Croatians. Migrants from Asia are picking up the slack. Plus, who has the most debt in the world?

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