Oscar Margain is a multilingual, multimedia journalist whose stories have taken him from the U.S.-Mexico border to China and back.
Margain returned state-side after two years in China working as a multimedia editor for China Media Group, where he helped vet and polish news stories slated for online publishing in the network’s New Media department. He also reported on a variety of cultural and social issues and hosted multiple social media livestreams from across the country.
During his time in China, Margain also freelanced as an international correspondent for Univision, filing stories in Spanish from Beijing on the COVID-19 outbreak and subsequent pandemic.
Prior to his stint in Asia, he spent the first seven years of his journalism career at the Texas-Mexico border covering major stories of national and international interest, including the immigration crisis, border security, the drug war and U.S.-Mexico trade issues.
In 2016, Margain joined TEGNA Media as a southwest border correspondent based out of the KENS 5 San Antonio station in Texas, contributing to the company’s 50-plus news affiliates.
His formative years were in the Texas Rio Grande Valley, where he worked as a bilingual TV reporter and anchor for the local Fox and Univision stations, as well as a multimedia reporter for the Telemundo affiliate in McAllen, Texas, from 2013 to 2016. He started his journalism career with a brief role as a photojournalist in 2011 at KRGV-ABC in Weslaco, Texas.
His work at the U.S.-Mexico border has earned him multiple awards including four regional Emmys, two Texas Associated Press awards, two Houston Press Club awards, and a regional Edward R. Murrow. Margain has also been recognized by the New England Emmy chapter for his reporting with nominations in 2022 and 2023.
Margain graduated from the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley with a bachelor’s degree in mass communication and in French language studies, with a focus in global security and Spanish.
The Monterrey, Mexico, native is now based in New England as a general-assignment reporter for Boston’s NBC, NECN and Telemundo networks.
The Latest
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MBTA displays mockup of new Green Line train in Boston
A model of the MBTA‘s next-generation Green Line train is outside Boston City Hall, where commuters can get a glimpse of features designed to improve their rides. The Type 10 train car, set to replace the existing fleet gradually over the coming years, represents the MBTA’s most accessible model to date. The mock-up will be displayed through Wednesday, from 7…
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Teen in critical condition after house fire in Hyde Park
A teenager pulled from the second floor of a burning home in Boston’s Hyde Park neighborhood was taken to the hospital in critical condition on Tuesday morning. The fire was reported around 4 a.m. on Hyde Park Avenue, according to fire officials. Smoke was showing upon arrival, and firefighters went in and removed one person from the second floor....
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Man faces murder, child endangerment charges in road rage shooting in Plymouth
A man accused of shooting and killing another man in a parking lot in Plymouth, Massachusetts, appeared in court on Monday. Authorities say it all started with two relatively minor traffic incidents that quickly escalated into a deadly, point blank shooting. Three to four gunshots is what some say they heard Friday just before 6 p.m. Several 911 calls were…
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Mass. Question 3: Should rideshare drivers be allowed to unionize?
This November, voters in Massachusetts will get to decide whether or not Uber and Lyft drivers should be allowed to unionize. If approved, Question 3 will make Massachusetts the first state in the nation to let rideshare drivers unionize, enabling them to engage in collective bargaining for wages, benefits and work conditions. In June, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell…
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Cleaning up Tobin Bridge's lead paint pollution brings new issue: noise pollution
Lead paint chips are continuing to fall from the Tobin Bridge, which spans the Mystic River between Boston and Chelsea. But the yearslong project to fix it is so loud, the state is giving out white noise machines. The noise comes from dust collectors, part of a repainting job that began last year after residents complained of the hazardous paint…
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Mass. seizes St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in effort to keep hospital running
Massachusetts has seized St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Boston’s Brighton neighborhood, using eminent domain in an effort to keep the Steward Health Care property open. Gov. Maura Healey plan involves transitioning operations of the hospital to Boston Medical Center. The governor says the move is necessary to avoid a public health emergency that would be set off by its...
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Man stabbed, walks to children's hospital in Brighton
A stabbing late Wednesday morning in Boston’s Brighton neighborhood shocked people in the area, with the wounded man checking himself in to a pediatric hospital. Officers temporarily shut down a section of Camelot Court and Warren Street while they searched the area for evidence and interviewed potential witnesses. The 34-year-old man who was stabbed near an apartment complex about 11:48…
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Pembroke mourns teen with ‘big old smile' killed in Duxbury car crash
A Massachusetts community is mourning the loss of a beloved teenager who died days after crashing her car into a tree in a nearby town.
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Mayor Wu, Boston school superintendent working to improve busing issues
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and School Superintendent Mary Skipper held a press conference Tuesday morning to discuss busing issues that have been impacting district families over the first week of the new school year. Last week, two Boston city councilors asked the state to intervene due to chronic issues with late school buses. City Councilors Ed Flynn and Erin Murphy…
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Some call to boycott Newton over scuffle that led to shooting at pro-Israel rally
Some pro-Israeli groups are calling for a travel and business boycott of Newton and Middlesex County after a scuffle at a pro-Israeli demonstration in the Boston suburb last week led to a man being shot.