Jeff Tiberii
Host, "Due South"Partnering with his longtime colleague Leoneda Inge, Jeff Tiberii is a co-host of Due South, app’s new daily show. A graduate of the Newhouse School at Syracuse University, Jeff has been in public radio for 20 years. He was a Morning Edition host at member station WFDD (Winston-Salem), before joining app in 2011. After reporting on a wide range of topics as the Greensboro Bureau Chief, Jeff moved over to politics. During his eight-year stint as Capitol Bureau Chief, he covered state and federal politics, produced a radio documentary, launched a podcast, and was named North Carolina Radio Reporter of the Year four times. He regularly filed stories for NPR, and his work has also appeared on the BBC, American Public Media, and PBS. Jeff lives in Raleigh with his wife and two young children. He is writing his first book, hopes to hike the entire Mountains-to-Sea trail, and is a left-handed cynic. He believes co-hosting Due South is a once-in-a-career opportunity, and is excited to tell an array of southern stories.
If you have a story, question or thought find him at JTiberii@app.org or .
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Members of local chapters of Black Men Run, Black Girls Run and Latinos Run join co-host Jeff Tiberii to talk about finding welcoming communities to explore the challenges and joys of running — together.
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Dr. Carl “Chip” Lavie tells co-host Jeff Tiberii that relatively small amounts of running can yield significant health benefits.
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NC State professor of history Nancy Mitchell joins Due South co-host Jeff Tiberii to reflect on the life of President Jimmy Carter.
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Co-hosts Jeff Tiberii and Leoneda Inge chat with local blues performer Pat "Mother Blues" Cohen and four chefs, Ricky Moore, Bill Smith, Mike De Los Santos and KC Hysmith at Motorco Music Hall.
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Leoneda Inge and Jeff Tiberii sit down with North Carolina rap icon Petey Pablo, a 2024 inductee into the NC Music Hall of Fame.
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Many Americans will swear off alcohol for the month through “Dry January,” but more people in the South than any other region already abstain. Two Pew Center researchers on the data, and how we fit into the national landscape.
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Forget Gatorade and a bag of chips – the American South is home to a more advanced style of gas station cuisine. Photographer Kate Medley knew this growing up in Mississippi, but what she didn’t know until she left was how unique and integral the restaurants and eateries at places you can also buy gas were to life in the South.
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Expanding internet access and the content creator lifestyle has opened the door to life on the road. But queer travelers in the South face still unique challenges.
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A cataclysmic storm. A divisive election. And a temporary reprieve thanks to March Madness. 2024 is almost in the books.
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A North Carolina farm family who lost tens of thousands of Christmas trees to Helene will celebrate their own Christmas with a five-foot "hurricane tree" that's "perfect for us this year."