
Kristin Moorehead
Multimedia Content ProducerKristin Moorehead is a Multimedia Content Producer and the Morning Edition anchor for WUFT News. A double Gator, Kristin graduated from UF with a bachelor’s degree in Telecommunication – News in 2021 and a master’s degree in Mass Communications in 2022. She has worked professionally in the Innovation News Center since then.
Kristin writes, edits and broadcasts stories for NPR’s “Morning Edition” and anchors local newscasts. She also hosts a weekly radio news show called "The Rundown" that airs on Thursdays at 1 p.m. on WUFT 89.1/90.1. Previously, Kristin served as a producer on the digital platform, overseeing editing and publication of news stories to WUFT’s website and social media accounts.
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A 24-year-old man and two teenagers have been indicted for a Gainesville murder on Feb. 19.
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An oddities market made its first appearance in Gainesville this weekend.
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Matthew Gray’s office is located in a section of a strip mall in Ocala. But inside, a cast of characters sit on sofas surrounded by skulls, bugs and taxidermied animals.
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On Tuesday night, someone broke the window of Mayor Harvey Ward’s office at City Hall, according to a city press release.
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The National Association of Realtors last week reached a settlement agreement in a national lawsuit. Professionals involved in the real estate market have been processing how this change will affect the industry in Florida.
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All four members of the Gainesville Regional Utilities Authority board have submitted their resignations following a lawsuit settlement between the state and the citizen group Gainesville Residents United.
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Both the number of farms and total acreage of farms in the US and Florida decreased between the previous census in 2017 and 2022. But Alachua County’s numbers increased.
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Dozens of community leaders representing Gainesville and Alachua County gathered at Eastwood Meadows on Monday in remembrance of a victim of gun violence.
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Sandra Gail Lambert is a prominent author living in Gainesville who writes fiction, a memoir and many personal essays about her experience as a disabled lesbian activist.
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After multiple public records requests and phone calls with the city, no one could confirm the exact number of people who have used the shelter in recent years.