Brian Eule
Brian Eule is the author of the nonfiction book, Match Day: One Day and One Dramatic Year in the Lives of Three New Doctors. He is the Managing Director for FRONTLINE on PBS, where he oversees FRONTLINE’s business operations and strategic planning under the leadership of FRONTLINE editor-in-chief and executive producer Raney Aronson-Rath.
Brian has spent more than 20 years focused on journalism, originally writing for newspapers and most recently having created and directed the journalism grantmaking initiative at the Heising-Simons Foundation for nearly a decade. In his work at Heising-Simons, he focused on journalism as a critical component of a healthy and diverse democracy, wrote and spoke about the future of journalism, and managed a multi-million dollar portfolio of grants supporting investigative journalism and underrepresented voices in mass media. There, Brian created and directed the American Mosaic Journalism Prize, the largest journalism prize in the United States in which two freelance journalists are awarded $100,000 annually “for excellence in long-form, narrative, or deep reporting on stories about underrepresented and/or misrepresented groups in the present American landscape.”
Brian holds a bachelor’s degree from Stanford University and a master’s from Columbia University. He is a visiting professor at UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism for the 2024-2025 academic year.
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