Bryant Denton
Digital Services SpecialistBryant Denton is a member of Vermont Public's digital team. He joined Vermont Public Radio in 2017 as an on-air host, and started reporting during the pandemic and racial reckoning of 2020. In 2022, Bryant began a temporary assignment at National Public Radio, working on their Member Partnership team that provides support with the digital services that NPR provides to over 250 stations in the NPR Network. At NPR, Bryant focused his reporting on arts and culture, specifically on the video game industry and the threads it has to entertainment as a whole. Bryant resides in Brooklyn, New York.
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For years, multiplayer video games have been moving more and more online. But some hardcore gamers still gather in person to compete against each other at the highest levels, including in the Green Mountain State.
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“Stereo-anti-types” is a special series from Homegoings examining some of the most troubling, most profound and most dangerous stereotypes that apply to Black men. In this first episode, host Myra Flynn and colleague Bryant Denton get up close and personal with podcaster Pendarvis Harshaw and comedian Marlon Fisher to tackle the myth of deadbeat dad. Both of these men have bucked societal bias and are anything but deadbeat – but as you'll hear, it wasn't always easy.
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Vermont Public's Bryant Denton met with a video game developer in Montreal, a Champlain college student, and a horror & video game culture reporter to examine the longstanding connection between Hollywood and the video game industry and how stories from games are reaching new audiences.
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A look inside a Vermont esports dojo and the skills needed to design successful video games.
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"Some of the greatest storytelling has been in video gaming," says The Last of Us actor Merle Dandridge. But it took decades for games to realize that potential and for Hollywood to do it justice.
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An inside look as Vermonters take One Small Step with StoryCorps. Learn about the process from start to finish, and then explore the project and the full archive here.
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In a year that’s taken us for an uncertain ride, public transportation services in Vermont have remained accessible, reliable, and most of all, safe.…
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It's a 70-degree night in November in Vermont, which compared to most 2020 headlines, is somehow still remarkable. What's more interesting though, is the…
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Their work isn’t “essential,” and they don’t save lives — but they could lift your spirits. With a difficult winter ahead, Vermont comics are doling out a…
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How can a state that is 94% white do better? Vermonters of color weigh in to answer this listener question.Note: Our show is produced for the ear. We…