​​Ruby Arora is a multilingual and multifaceted journalist, who led Michigan This Morning, northern Michigan's number-one morning show, as a news anchor. Arora made her debut as an executive producer and host of the bilingual documentary Two in a Billion of Satnam Singh, a news-breaking interview of the first Indian-born NBA player's transition to AEW wrestling. Her documentary reached an international audience, making her the first reporter in the world to report Singh's career transition in an in-depth interview in 2022. ​ Prior to the documentary, Arora worked as a Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism Fellow and as a racial equity research analyst for the Guardian, United Kingdom. Arora attended Arizona State University, where she received a Master of Arts in Sports Journalism and reported on professional and local sports. Highlights from her online publication tenure at Cronkite exemplified her tenacity in news-breaking stories and unearthing uncommon and candid responses from top athletes to locals. ​ Arora reported on the man behind then-Portland Trail Blazers franchise player Dame Lillard's max two-year contract extension hours before the NBA player's extension became public in 2022. She also reported on the father/son and player/coach relationship between NFL Hall of Famer Kurt Warner and his then-high school son on the day of Warner's biopic debut in 2021. Additionally, Arora covered the Phoenix Mercury and looked at how Britteny Griner's unlawful Russian detainment affected the team while under a new and first-year head coach. ​ Raised a Hoosier, Arora attended the University of Indianapolis for her first master's degree in sports management and acquired her Bachelor of Science in Business Marketing with minors in legal studies and communications. While at Indianapolis, Arora interned at the Indiana Pacers and ProPharma. ​ She received awards from the Asian American Journalist Association, Arizona State University, the Indiana Pacers, and the University of Indianapolis. Arora is an ambassador and granter at Make-A-Wish Foundation and Hospice of Michigan. She also coached a winless girls’ middle school basketball team to playoffs in Los Angeles after her collegiate tenure.