Print Storytelling
Global Journalist
Missourian
Politico Europe
WKOW
Global Journalist
Global Journalist focuses on under-reported stories from around the world and one of the subjects we frequently brush up against is press freedom. GJ runs a series called Project Exile to profile exiled journalists as a way to gain insight into the political climate of opaque regimes. The stories are also published in the Index on Censorship.
PROJECT EXILE: PAKISTANI REPORTER MOVES TO FRANCE AFTER KIDNAP ATTEMPT
“I was resisting and they kept hitting me with the butts of their guns.”
Jumping out of a car to escape being abducted at gunpoint by the Pakistani military isn’t exactly how journalist Taha Siddiqui planned to start his trip to London. Read more...
Global Journalist also conducts digital-only additional interviews to feature an important aspect of the story that wouldn't work well on a panel discussion.
MASK ART DECRIES AIR POLLUTION, CLIMATE CHANGE
In air pollution masks, a canvass for solutions
Raising awareness about environmental issues like air pollution and climate change is no easy task. The problems are often slow-moving disasters, compounded by decades of policy choices on issues like whether to invest in mass transit or roads or whether to build coal-fired power plants or other forms of electricity generation. Read more...
Missourian
Covered the Missouri legislative session while working as a statehouse correspondent in Jefferson City, Missouri during the spring of 2017.
State lawmakers consider changes to make driver's licenses comply with federal law
JEFFERSON CITY — Missourians may not be able to use their driver's licenses to board airplanes next year if state lawmakers don't take steps to make those IDs compliant with federal law. Read more...
Missouri lawmakers consider raising bar employees must meet to prove discrimination
JEFFERSON CITY — The standards Missourians must meet to prove that an employer discriminated against them would increase under legislation being considered by a Senate committee. Read more...
Missouri House passes two new bills in support of law enforcement
JEFFERSON CITY — Protecting law enforcement officers is the main objective of two bills that the Missouri house passed Thursday.
One bill increases criminal penalties for some crimes against law enforcement officers. The other creates a mass-alert system to help track down perpetrators who harm or kill a law enforcement officer. Both bills now go to the state Senate for consideration. Read more...
WKOW 27 News, Madison, WI
During the Summer of 2017, I worked as an intern at WKOW where I pitched stories, helped reporters with day-turn stories, helped shoot drone footage, wrote web-first content and produced VOSOTs for the newscast.
Former KKK Wizard Fears Charlottesville Tragedy Just the Beginning