Molly Seavy-Nesper 鈥12

Rarefied Air

Writing background helps Seavy-Nesper 鈥12 in role on NPR flagship show.

A year out of college, Molly Seavy-Nesper 鈥12 was living back home and, by her own admission, feeling 鈥渧ery lost.鈥

Radio鈥攁nd in particular Fresh Air and its host Terry Gross鈥攚as a lifeline. 鈥淲hen I was miserable in Massachusetts, working in retail and restaurants, I listened to Fresh Air in the car,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd I remember those interviews. 

鈥淚 remember Terry talking to Rachel Maddow about depression, and I remember the anniversary of September 11th and her talking to somebody who trained rescue dogs, and I remember the powerful force of radio when you feel so alone and so stuck.鈥

Back then, she couldn鈥檛 have imagined that, within the year, she鈥檇 land a Fresh Air internship. Or that the internship would lead to 鈥渢he best job I could have in my field.鈥

A French and Cities double major at Bryn Mawr, Seavy-Nesper today works as associate producer of digital media for Fresh Air. In that role, she鈥檚 the person responsible for managing the program鈥檚 digital presence鈥攂uilding webpages, running social media, and handling the podcast. 

 

Molly Seavy-Nesper 鈥12

Writing is a big part of her job鈥攊n addition to her digital work, she often writes copy for the 鈥渢oday on the show鈥 promos that appear at the top of the hour鈥攁nd she credits her Bryn Mawr experience with helping her hone that skill. 鈥淲ithout that Bryn Mawr 鈥榳riting boot camp,鈥 I certainly wouldn't be here,鈥 she says. 鈥淚'm writing all day, every day. I'm writing for radio, I'm writing for Terry鈥檚 voice, I'm writing in my own voice鈥攁nd feeling confident to have people critique my writing is so important in what I do.鈥 

A true Mawrter, Seavy-Nesper describes the College as 鈥渁 gift of four years where I could focus on myself and my friendships and my academic interests. 鈥 So by the time that I was out in the 鈥榬eal world,鈥 I was already fully formed, and I wasn't going to change because of patriarchy.鈥

鈥淏eing a feminist and really identifying with my Bryn Mawr experience has helped me feel closer to Terry, too,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he started at a feminist radio show called Woman Power, and so she was just out there on the frontlines before anybody else was.鈥 

When asked about the highlights of her job, Seavy-Nesper, again a true Mawrter, cites the advance copies of books and movies that flood the office. And, while most guests record remotely and not in Philadelphia, she has met a handful of big names: she鈥檚 met Trevor Noah, Anthony Bourdain, Hillary Clinton, and a host of authors. 

And, 鈥渙h, Gloria Steinem!鈥 she adds. 鈥淲hat do you say to Gloria Steinem? I'm pretty sure I said thank you and started crying and then I was like, I have to go now.鈥
 
NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross is a long-form interview show that covers arts and issues. It's heard on about 650 stations across the country, with six million weekly broadcast listeners. Fresh Air was the most downloaded podcast on Apple podcasts in 2015, 2016, and 2017. 

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is produced at in Philadelphia and broadcast nationally by NPR.

Published on: 03/08/2019