Kara Frame Kara Frame is a video producer and director for NPR Music's Tiny Desk Concerts series.
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Kara Frame

Bronson Arcuri/NPR
Kara Frame 2018
Bronson Arcuri/NPR

Kara Frame

Video Producer

Kara Frame is a video producer and director for NPR Music's Tiny Desk Concerts series. To sum up what she loves most about working on the iconic series, she says, "We put joy into the world." In addition to this work, she manages the NPR Music Instagram account. Prior to her work on the music team, she crafted stories about housing segregation in Baltimore, Md., motherhood in a refugee camp in Lesbos, Greece, and food deserts in Washington, D.C.

Frame's personal projects have focused primarily on veterans and PTSD. In 2016, her short documentary I Will Go Back Tonight was awarded first place for long-form multimedia at the NPPA Northern Short Course.

In her free time, Frame volunteers with Women Photojournalists of Washington (WPOW), a 501c3 nonprofit dedicated to educating the public about the role of women in visual journalism and fostering their professional success. She organizes the annual WPOW portfolio review and seminar, an event that invites visual journalists of all career levels to share their work with some of the world's top editors from organizations such as NPR, National Geographic, Washington Post, The New York Times, Vox, Smithsonian Magazine, among many others.

Before starting at NPR in 2016, Frame received a B.A. in African-American Studies from Temple University in Philadelphia, Pa., and a M.A in New Media Photojournalism from the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. When she's not working on videos or volunteering with WPOW, you can find her in her garden, hosting a dinner for friends or getting lost in the woods in her teardrop camper, Sunshine.

Story Archive

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Naomi and Shaquille at The Ark City of Refuge, a shelter and rehabilitation center in Faure. In her early teens, Naomi began spending time on the streets. "I've never been homeless, I'm just a drifter," she says. 2012. Sarah Stacke hide caption

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Sarah Stacke

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Clockwise from upper left: IKOQWE, Joyce Wrice, Solomon Fox, Joe'l Young, Hirsch, Floating Points and Pharaoh Sanders. Courtesy of the artists hide caption

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Courtesy of the artists

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Staff Sgt. Tom Frame, the author's father, stands at right in this 1968 snapshot from Vietnam. Frame family photo hide caption

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Frame family photo

'They Are My Men': A 50-Year Veterans Reunion Helped My Dad Process A Brutal Battle

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Monday

Researchers say when a baby is babbling, he's primed to learn. Petri Oeschger/Getty Images hide caption

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Petri Oeschger/Getty Images

Baby Talk: Decoding The Secret Language Of Babies

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