Daylina Miller
Multimedia JournalistI took my first photography class when I was 11. My stepmom begged a local group to let me into the adults-only class, and armed with a 35 mm disposable camera, I started my journey toward multimedia journalism.
Now I’m WUSF’s multimedia reporter, creating photos, videos, audiograms and more to complement our news coverage.
While my visual journalism spans from phosphate mines to cute, COVID-sniffing dogs, I’m particularly interested in mental health coverage as someone who has long been open about my own struggles with depression, anxiety and ADHD.
As a non-binary person (they/them pronouns, please), I’m also interested in redefining how news outlets cover the transgender community, a vulnerable population with much misinformation circulating about us.
In my free time, I play tabletop games and video games (message me to visit the radio station I’ve built on my Animal Crossing island!), make art with ethically sourced bones, and add to the Pokemon card collection I started as a child in the '90s.
Contact Daylina at 813-974-8629, on Twitter @DaylinaMiller or by email at daylinamiller@wusf.org.
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"Can’t Stop Change: Queer Climate Stories from the Florida Frontlines" premiered last weekend at the Tampa Bay Transgender Film Festival. It follows the film's production team on a road trip across Florida to meet with 14 LGBTQ+ artists, organizers and activists.
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The Trader Joe's website lists the new location as "Clearwater," but the address is actually in Palm Harbor.
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More than 20 anti-LGBTQ bills failed to pass or were amended to avoid targeting the LGBTQ+ community.
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The measles can be dangerous, even fatal. Public health experts urge vaccination as the best form of protection.
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TransNetwork is a Tampa Bay area organization that is building community for transgender and gender expansive people, and educating allies on how they can help support them.
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"I Am My Own Wife" is a Pulitzer Prize-winning play based on the interviews playwright Doug Wright did with Charlotta von Mahlsdorf over the course of several years in the 1990s. It runs at Stageworks through Feb. 25.
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WUSF is asking members of the community to nominate their favorite "queer elders" to highlight the work of older LGBTQ+ Tampa Bay residents.
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Here's what you need to know, including where to park and how to navigate downtown Tampa.
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It's in effect until Tuesday at 9 p.m. as a powerful line of storms moves across the state.
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It would allow teens ages 16 and 17 to work at heights over 6 feet if they earn a safety certificate and are supervised. Holly Bullard, with the Florida Policy Institute, calls it a "poison bill."