Telling their story in their voice w/ Stephan Bisaha (NPR)
Today my guest is Stephan Bisaha.
Stephan covers personal finance, business, and economics at NPR. You can hear him frequently on All Things Considered [https://www.npr.org/2026/05/06/nx-s1-5806596-e1/a-trip-to-europe-in-this-economy-expensive-flights-keep-vacations-closer-to-home] and The Indicator [https://www.npr.org/people/1242808013/stephan-bisaha] from [https://www.npr.org/people/1242808013/stephan-bisaha]Planet Money [https://www.npr.org/people/1242808013/stephan-bisaha].
He also performs at Faraway Theater [https://farawaybham.com/] in Birmingham, AL., which is where we met.
In this episode we talk about his career in journalism and how he approaches writing for radio.
When he was studying journalism, he discovered the power of people’s voices.
It started when he listened to an episode on Radiolab called “Falling.” In it, there’s an interview between two people, Sarita and Simon, who broke up. The moment that struck Stephan was when Sarita shares that after her break up with Simon, she would walk by his restaurant. Because he had ‘face blindness’, he never recognized her. And you can hear him learn about her habit live (19:10 — 20:37 [https://radiolab.org/podcast/91726-falling/transcript]) — his voice cracking, his quiet reflection.
Throughout his career, he has centered the protagonist’s voice in his reporting.
Putting people back into the data
One quality of someone’s voice is that it’s humanizing. In this episode, Stephan talks about this concept of re-humanizing data. Polls, stats, and surveys come from human beings. They’re about people.
We can get used to reporting numbers — 50k users, 900 responders, 1mm site visitors — and forget that they are real people with, as Morrissey said, “loves and hates and passions just like mine.”
Our job is to put life back into the figures so that our work is about the people we’re seeking to serve. One way to do this is to include the stories behind the numbers.
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Side bar - you haven’t listened to Planet Money?
In this episode, Stephan talks about NPR’s the Indicator and Planet Money.
If you haven’t listened to this show, it’s the best business podcast that does not feel like a business podcast.
I highly recommend listening to ‘Why Is The Milk In The Back Of The Store? [https://www.npr.org/sections/money/2016/09/21/494927147/episode-555-why-is-the-milk-in-the-back-of-the-store]’ and ‘The Fondue Conspiracy [https://www.npr.org/sections/money/2018/05/02/607787950/episode-575-the-fondue-conspiracy].’
What’s your favorite narrative podcast?
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