Bukola Adebayo
Bukola Adebayo is a senior producer for CNN Digital in Lagos, Nigeria, where she reports on breaking news, writes features and produces enterprise stories about Africa for CNN International. She has covered a wide range of topics including gender inequality, social injustice and political uprisings. Her investigation of a 2018 sex-for-grades scandal at a Nigerian university contributed to the prosecution and conviction of a lecturer for sexual misconduct, a rarity in her country. She previously reported for The Punch, Nigeria’s most widely read newspaper, where she ran the health desk and wrote investigative stories about medical and environmental issues.
@BUKAdebayo
Yasmin Amer
Yasmin Amer is a Boston-based journalist who most recently worked as a senior podcast reporter and producer for WBUR’s iLab. She joined WBUR in 2016 as a field producer for “Morning Edition.” Before that, she spent six years at CNN’s headquarters in Atlanta where she worked as a writer, producer and news editor. As a fluent Arabic speaker, she helped cover several breaking stories out of the Middle East, including the Arab Spring protests and the Syrian civil war.
@yasminamer
John Archibald
John Archibald is a columnist for the Alabama Media Group. His columns appear in The Birmingham News, The Huntsville Times, the Mobile Press-Register, AL.com and its social brand, Reckon. He won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2018. His book “Shaking the Gates of Hell,” about his family, civil rights in the South and the church’s role in a conspiracy of silence, will be released in May 2021.
@JohnArchibald
Joseph Bernstein
Joseph Bernstein is a senior technology reporter for BuzzFeed News in New York, where he writes feature stories about the effects of social platforms on American society. He arrived at BuzzFeed in 2013 to cover the gaming industry. Since 2015, he has been covering the intersection of technology, media, ideology and politics, with a focus on right-wing media and online radicalization. He previously worked as editor at Kill Screen Magazine and a fact checker and reporter for Popular Science.
@Bernstein
Marc-Olivier Bherer
Marc-Olivier Bherer is a staff editor and reporter for the Ideas-Debates section of the French daily Le Monde. Working primarily for the op-ed pages, he commissions and edits articles on diverse topics, both national and international. He also writes about intellectual life, often in America, as well as populism and social issues. He regularly contributes to the paper’s weekly literary supplement, Le Monde des Livres. He has translated Jonathan Israel’s “Revolutionary Ideas” and his translation of Omer Bartov’s “Anatomy of a Genocide” will be published in 2021. He started his career at Courrier International, and his work has been published by Harper’s and L’Express, among others.
@MOB238
Austin Bogues
Austin Bogues covers Asbury Park and Neptune Township as well as race relations for the Asbury Park Press, part of the USA Today Network in New Jersey. He previously worked for the Daily Press Media Group in his hometown of Newport News, Va., covering a variety of beats including crime, transportation and education. He has won awards for his reporting on local government, environmental matters and federal drug policy.
@AustinBogues
Samantha Broun
Samantha Broun is a Massachusetts-based radio journalist who serves as managing editor for Atlantic Public Media’s Transom.org, which channels new work, voices and ideas into public media. She works with APM on all its projects, including Transom workshops for radio/audio producers. Broun’s reporting focuses on the personal and political impact of violent crime. Her radio documentary, “A Life Sentence: Victims, Offenders, Justice And My Mother” was honored with a 2016 Third Coast International Audio Festival Silver Award and a 2017 Dart Award, and was a finalist for a Peabody Award. Her two-part radio documentary, “Living With Murder” was one of eight “Frontline” features honored with a 2019 Gold Baton from the Alfred duPont-Columbia Awards.
@BrounSamantha
Emily Corwin
Emily Corwin is an investigative reporter and editor for Vermont Public Radio. Previously, she reported on criminal justice for New Hampshire Public Radio, where she reported and hosted “Supervision,” a short-run podcast chronicling one man’s life on parole. Her reporting has won a Gracie Award and numerous regional Edward R. Murrow awards, including one for investigative reporting in 2019. Her collaborative investigation into lax oversight and poor care at Vermont long-term care facilities was a finalist for a 2019 IRE Award. Her podcast “Supervision” was also a finalist for a 2020 Livingston Award.
@emilycorwin
Scott Dance
Scott Dance writes about the environment for The Baltimore Sun, focusing on the Chesapeake Bay. “Power struggle,” his series detailing how a Maryland subsidy program that promotes renewable energy also subsidizes paper mills and trash incinerators, won second place for explanatory reporting from the Society of Environmental Journalists in 2018. He was part of the Sun team named a Pulitzer finalist for coverage of the 2015 death of Freddie Gray and the Baltimore uprising that followed. Before joining the Sun in 2012, he was a business reporter for the Baltimore Business Journal.
@ssdance
Robert Frederick
Robert Frederick is the digital managing editor of American Scientist, where he oversees the magazine’s digital presence and reports on all branches of science. Previously, he was podcaster, video producer, and web editor for Science magazine and a science journalist for St. Louis Public Radio, contributing to the NPR network. Throughout his journalism career, he has freelanced for a wide variety of outlets in print, radio, television and online and is a contributor to “The Science Writers’ Handbook.”
@R_E_Frederick
Sarah L. Kaufman
Sarah L. Kaufman is the chief dance critic for The Washington Post and author of “The Art of Grace: On Moving Well Through Life.” She covers the aesthetics and meaning of the arts, entertainment, sports and behavior. She has exposed violence against women in dance companies, broke the story about the lack of copyright protection for Martha Graham’s choreography and her multimedia projects have explored neuroscience and art. She came to the Post after writing and translating in Munich and working at The Buffalo News. Her awards include the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism and the Missouri Lifestyle Arts & Entertainment Award for Reporting.
@SarahLKaufman
Vidya Krishnan
Vidya Krishnan is an investigative journalist based in India. She has reported on the Rohingya genocide, the global tuberculosis pandemic and the right-to-health movements in the developing world. Her first book, “Phantom Plague: The Untold Story of How Tuberculosis Shaped our History,” will be published in 2021. She received an International Reporting Fellowship in 2015 to report on changing patent laws in South Africa and their impact on drug prices in African nations.
@VidyaKrishnan
Willoughby Mariano
Willoughby Mariano is an investigative reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, where she focuses on housing and criminal justice issues. She previously worked for PolitiFact Georgia, the AJC team that fact checked the claims of elected officials, and at the Orlando Sentinel, where she covered crime and breaking news. Past honors include a National Headliner Award in investigative journalism and the Atlanta Press Club’s award for civil and human rights reporting. Mariano is president of the Asian American Journalists Association’s Atlanta chapter and chaired the national organization’s 2019 convention.
@wmariano
Amber Payne
Amber Payne, executive producer at BET Digital, oversees daily editorial and longform video content for BET.com. Previously, she served as executive producer of Teen Vogue and them., a vertical focused on LGBTQ+ stories. Payne also founded NBCNews.com’s NBCBLK, another vertical created to elevate the conversation around Black identity, and worked on breaking news and features as an award-winning producer for “NBC Nightly News.” She has covered stories throughout the U.S., Ecuador and parts of West and South Africa, including Nelson Mandela’s funeral, the royal wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, the Vancouver Olympics and Hurricane Katrina recovery. Payne’s new feature-length documentary is “Harlem Rising: A Community Changing the Odds.”
@amberwaves
Alissa J. Rubin
Alissa J. Rubin is the Baghdad bureau chief for The New York Times and previously served as bureau chief in Paris and Kabul. Before joining the Times in 2007, she covered the Balkans as the Vienna bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times while simultaneously working as Baghdad co-bureau chief. She spent 10 years reporting in Washington before going overseas. Prior to that, Rubin was a reporter in Kansas for the Knight-Ridder newspaper then known as The Wichita Eagle-Beacon. She won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting and the 2015 John Chancellor Award for journalistic achievement, among other awards.
@Alissanyt
Maxwell Strachan
Maxwell Strachan is a senior features editor at Vice where he covers inequality, corporate malfeasance and other topics. Prior to joining Vice, he worked at HuffPost for nine years, most recently as a senior reporter covering the 2020 Democratic primary. Before that, he served as a senior reporter writing feature stories about media and culture and as a senior editor on the business, technology, sports and entertainment desks.
@maxwellstrachan