Photo by Whitney Browne


Trina Mannino is a producer and reporter living in the New York City area. Her writing has appeared in ARTnews, Atlas Obscura, Crain's Chicago Business, The City, Vice, WNET’s All Arts, among others. Her audio work can be heard on Marketplace, Project Brazen’s The Closer, The Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere.

 Selections of Published Audio Work

  • WSJ's Take On the Week

    President Donald Trump has said he thinks interest rates are too high. Is he right? Co-hosts Gunjan Banerji and Telis Demos discuss with Sonal Desai, chief investment officer of Franklin Templeton Fixed Income.

  • Marketplace: Arts nonprofits look to expand their real estate footprint

    Reported this feature, which included field reporting, voicing, and cutting tape using Pro Tools for Marketplace’s flagship afternoon show.

  • The Closer: How ABC and ESPN made Disney into a powerhouse.

    Produced this episode — from developing story structure, scripting, selecting archival sound to fact-checking.

  • The Closer: How to beat an oil giant

    Produced this episode — from developing story structure, scripting, selecting archival sound to fact-checking.

  • Marketplace: Hip-hop at 50: How did entrepreneurs in the genre get their start?

    Reported this feature, which included field reporting, obtaining an interview with a high-profile emcee, voicing, and cutting tape using Pro Tools.

  • Marketplace: Galleries flock to lower Manhattan’s Tribeca

    Reported this feature, which included field reporting, booking experts, and cutting tape using Pro Tools.

 Selections of Published Print Work

  • Gucci and Prada now own their buildings. What’s their plan?

    Amid a high-end retail rebound that would have been hard to predict a few years ago, brands are now competing to shore up their real estate assets.

  • Art World, Take Heed: The Christie’s Hack Was a Warning

    Like many sectors, the art market is facing a growing onslaught of cybersecurity threats.

  • Theaters fight to survive in an unsteady environment

    As theaters of all sizes face mounting challenges, the industry is evaluating how to navigate an uncertain future.

  • New York cannabis growers are struggling to stay alive

    Many small-scale New York cannabis farmers are worried they’re getting left behind by the state’s fledgling retail industry.

  • No matter the economy, beauty sells

    Stubborn inflation and the threat of a recession may lead some shoppers to cut back on nonessential items, but that doesn’t apply to their favorite mascara or face mask.

  • State Pot Board Deals Out NY’s First Weed-Selling Licenses

    The state’s cannabis regulatory board approved 36 of potentially 175 pot-selling licenses Monday — with at least 13 of them to be based in the city.

  • Students' futures are on the line as CPS works on its pandemic recovery

    Some parents are concerned that the district will continue to come up short in delivering what their kids need to succeed. And they're making moves.

  • To find balance amid a pandemic, more working moms pushed to work for themselves

    As COVID upended domestic life, women's rate of self-employment rose faster than the share of men in the sector.

  • Equity applicants express concern over NY’s emerging legal marijuana industry

    While the state intends to prioritize aspiring minority applicants, concerns remain over its delivery on that promise.

Photography

Ticket-holders wore sequins and feathered dresses. Patterned pocket squares peeked out from suit jackets. Some donned stilettos and clutched teeny, bejeweled pocketbooks.