News Topic:
Featured Profile
A secret system of legal settlements has concealed corruption, criminality and misconduct by law enforcement officers throughout California for decades, according to a new investigation “Right to Remain Secret” by Katey Rusch (‘20) and Casey Smith (‘20) of UC Berkeley Journalism’s Investigative Reporting Program. The investigation, published in collaboration with The San Francisco Chronicle, reveals…
Read MoreFive UC Berkeley Journalism alumni and one of our multimedia lecturers are among the finalists for the 2024 Gerald Loeb Awards for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism. Sarah Cahlan (’19) and multimedia Lecturer John Harden were part of The Washington Post team named as finalists in the Feature Category for “American Icon,” a series of…
Read MoreA message from Emily Gurnon (’93), a longtime friend and classmate of Jennifer’s: Jennifer Bjorhus, a 1993 graduate of the journalism school and longtime newspaper reporter, died Aug. 9 after a nine-month battle with glioblastoma. She was 59. After earning her MJ, with a joint master’s in Asian Studies, she worked for eight years on…
Read MoreThe National Association of Black Journalists celebrated Berkeley Journalism Professor Lisa Armstrong and alums Corey Antonio Rose (’23) and Jason Samuels (’95) at the organization’s 2024 convention in Chicago. The Salute to Excellence Awards — the only journalism competition in the United States to honor exemplary coverage of the African diaspora and Black issues exclusively…
Read MoreTen Berkeley Journalism alumni are among the “exceptional journalists and documentarians” named nominees in the News & Documentary Emmy Awards. Violet Du Feng (’04) is nominated for Best Documentary for Independent Lens’ Hidden Letters (PBS), which reveals how modern women in China are working to maintain the tradition of Nüshu, a secret calligraphy language used…
Read MoreFour prolific Berkeley Journalism alums were honored with Sigma Delta Chi Awards for the most outstanding work published or broadcast in 2023. Their coverage explored everything from the paucity of mental health care to court challenges regarding social media content moderators in Africa to the stunning number of skydiving accidents at one Northern California company.…
Read MoreVideographers Maggie Beidelman (’13) and Jackeline Luna (’18) of Los Angeles Times have won the award for the best multimedia journalism covering the climate crisis in the 2024 CCNow Journalism Awards. The winners were selected from more than 1,250 entries, representing outlets around the world. From the announcement: California’s sunny Imperial Valley would seem…
Read MoreAmid the redwood trees on the California-Oregon border sits one of the most infamous prisons in United States history. Pelican Bay is a labyrinthine construction of solid cement blocks — a supermax prison — opened in 1989 and designed specifically for mass-scale solitary confinement. For decades, it held men alone in tiny cells indefinitely. Then…
Read MoreAlum Coral Murphy Marcos (’24) and student Negar Ajayebi (’25) were honored by the White House Correspondents’ Association at a celebration in Washington, DC in late April. Ajayebi was awarded the White House Correspondents’ Association college scholarship in 2024 alongside journalism students from 16 colleges and universities nationwide. Murphy Marcos, who graduated from Berkeley Journalism…
Read MoreEight Berkeley Journalism graduates are among those honored for distinguished journalism in the 2024 Pulitzer Prizes, Columbia University announced May 6. Following a string of high honors from the nation’s top investigative reporting competitions, alum Brett Murphy (’16), a reporter on ProPublica’s national desk, won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. Judges noted the…
Read More