
Adrienne Hoar McGibbon
Video Editor/Multimedia Journalist, VPM NewsAdrienne is the video editor and health care reporter at VPM. She also worked as a multimedia journalist and producer for VPM News Focal Point, VPM's news magazine style, public affairs program.
Before joining VPM, McGibbon worked as a producer and video journalist at C-SPAN in Washington, D.C focusing on the intersection of public affairs, politics and history. Prior to joining C-SPAN she worked in newsrooms in Hartford, Connecticut and Des Moines, Iowa. McGibbon has covered presidential elections since 2004, and the federal response to Hurricane Katrina and COVID-19.
The Richmond native and Freeman High School graduate earned a bachelor's in broadcast journalism from Emerson College and a master's degree in political communication from The Johns Hopkins University. She lives in Midlothian with her husband and two children.
Email Adrienne: [email protected]
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Administrators plan responses, train staff for potential threats
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Study says 95% of callers were unable to schedule prenatal care appointments.
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Rural hospital expanding free treatment for un- and underinsured
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Restoration allows Colonial Williamsburg to share more Black American stories.
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Dr. Robert Winn says improved screening methods, vaccines could help wipe out the disease.
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Many Roanoke residents are still haunted by their memories of urban renewal. A new development plan is bringing back issues of distrust between the community and city leaders.
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An exhibit shows the impact of redlining through a series of maps. The maps show how the discriminatory housing practice has impacts on other factors like wealth and health.
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Eastern Mennonite University, located in Harrisonburg, Virginia, began the nation’s first graduate level program related to restorative justice. Now students come from around the world to study big ideas about reform on this small college campus.
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New national DAR leader makes diversity a top priority as Virginia chapters welcome descendants of “Forgotten Patriots.”
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A bronze statue of the Virginia civil rights figure could be displayed in the U.S. Capitol by 2025.