Allie Vugrincic
Multi Media ReporterAllie Vugrincic has been a radio reporter at WOSU 89.7 NPR News since March 2023 and has been the station's mid-day radio host since January 2025.
She came to Columbus from her hometown of Warren, Ohio, where she was a reporter and photographer for The Tribune Chronicle and Vindicator newspapers. She formally began her newspaper career on Nov. 26, 2018, the day that General Motors announced it was idling its nearby auto production plant in Lordstown. Allie came in to sign paperwork, but stayed to write a story about electric vehicles after a co-worker showed her how to sign onto her computer and use the office phone.
During her four years at the newspaper, Allie covered everything from local government to crime, storm damage, festivals, homelessness counts, maple syrup season (twice) and one ill-fated tree-trimming truck that flipped onto a house. Her favorite photography assignment was joining U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg when he came to view the wreckage of the East Palestine train derailment in February 2023.
At WOSU, Allie primarily focuses on long-form local radio stories and has particular enthusiasm for education, the environment, the housing crisis and issues that impact the arts. She also enjoys her time on the air as a fill-in host for All Things Considered and Morning Edition.
Allie graduated from Denison University with a Bachelor’s degree in cinema.
She also holds a Master of Arts in Creative Writing from University College Cork in Ireland. There, her favorite pastime was “castlehunting,” or searching for ruins of castles and monasteries and visiting ancient sites, usually on her trusty bicycle. Several of Allie’s poems have been published in Irish literary journals, but she would prefer you didn't read them.
Passionate about all forms of storytelling, Allie has dabbled in community theatre, and she still helps out on friends’ film sets when she finds the time.
Allie has been recognized by the Ohio APME and the Ohio Society of Professional Journalists for her education reporting, featuring writing and explanatory stories. She shares a first-place honor for spot news with her WOSU colleague, George Shillcock, for their combined coverage of the fatal 2023 Tusky Valley Schools bus crash in Licking County.
Along with her colleagues, Debbie Holmes, Renee Fox, and Matthew Rand, Allie won a 2025 Regional Edward R. Murrow Award for WOSU's State of Religion series.
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A letter from Westerville North High School Principal Kurt Yancey sent to parents said the school received "multiple reports of potential violence occurring at the event."
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The Turner Brothers' pilot "FreeLance" follows a young filmmaker named Lance trying to make it in the industry in Columbus.
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Columbus City Schools' Superintendent Angela Chapman said the cuts will save the district more than $7 million. Some of the positions were already empty.
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Hailey Buzbee, 17, had been missing since she left her home in Fishers, Indiana, overnight on Jan. 5. During a press conference Sunday, Fishers Police Chief Ed Gebhart said that detectives linked Tyler Thomas, 39, of Columbus to Hailey's disappearance.
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Trustees put Grubb on paid leave in November, shortly after he was acquitted of murder and other charges in the 2023 shooting death of 21-year-old Ta'Kaya Young.
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Roads may have been closed for much of the day Sunday, but that didn't stop neighbors in Columbus' Franklin Park from enjoying the weather.
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In a second vote to remove Whitehall City Councilman Gerald Dixon, his fellow council members were split three to three on Tuesday. Dixon is accused of sexually abusing underage boys.
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Business & EconomyAs of 2024, 525 data centers were located in eight states around the Great Lakes region. That's a fifth of the nation's data centers and hundreds more are planned.
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Protesters on Thursday night carried signs that read, "From Columbus to Minneapolis, stop ICE terror." A federal immigrations officer shot and killed a woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday.
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Health, Science & EnvironmentThe four new vehicles look like van-style ambulances, but CFD's medical director, Dr. Robert Lowe, said they are not first response vehicles.