May 24, 2018
Beat of the Week
(Honorable Mention)
Visual journalists capture exclusive images of the Kilauea eruption
for capturing exclusive, dramatic visuals of lava spewing from the eruption of Kilauea in Hawaii. https://bit.ly/2s9yaFD
for capturing exclusive, dramatic visuals of lava spewing from the eruption of Kilauea in Hawaii. https://bit.ly/2s9yaFD
for revealing that in the turmoil over the government shutdown, a tax that pays for medical treatment for black lung sufferers was quietly cut in half. Lovan broke the story with a muscular multimedia package demonstrating the decision’s impact at its most human, visceral level – and placed that in the context of the Trump administration’s promises to save the coal industry. https://bit.ly/2YkBNYuhttps://bit.ly/2WveFFd
for questioning New York City’s longtime boast of having 1 million or 2 million people jamming into Times Square on New Year’s Eve. His investigation confirmed that the real tally is probably closer to 100,000. https://bit.ly/2F5wOnq
for dominating coverage in the aftermath of the death of a 7-year-old Guatemalan migrant Jakelin Caal in the custody of the U.S. Border Patrol.https://bit.ly/2T0U0qMhttps://bit.ly/2LrslwH
for dogged beat reporting that put the AP way out front on a highly competitive story: that the attorney generals of Maryland and the District of Columbia were filing subpoenas targeting 37 separate entities, including the Trump Organization and the IRS, as part of a lawsuit accusing Donald Trump of profiting off the presidency. https://bit.ly/2En37Oa
for an all-formats effort to tell a little-noticed story of the opioid crisis – how clergy members have become first responders, of sorts, leaving their pulpits to go directly to the streets to help get people into treatment and on a path to recovery. https://bit.ly/2BqB2E6
The idea was bold from its inception: Attempting to count dead and missing migrants worldwide.
After covering the outflow of refugees in the wake of the Islamic State's takeover in parts of Iraq last year, Paris enterprise writer Lori Hinnant noticed a lack of data on the migration. She set off on a mission to count the uncountable.
The yearlong effort to document lives that would otherwise go unnoticed proved extremely challenging, precisely because it was plowing such new ground. An AP team of more than a dozen people painstakingly compiled information that had never been put together before from international groups, forensic records, missing persons reports and death records, and went through data from thousands of interviews with migrants. The data came alive with individual stories of migrants, a challenge in itself.
The AP project found 56,800 dead and missing migrants since 2014, almost double the number currently put out by the United Nations, which focuses heavily on Europe and nearly excludes several other areas of the world. The report drew significant interest, despite the fact that it ran six days before the U.S. midterm elections.
For their ambitious project that established AP as a global authority on this issue, Hinnant, Istanbul visual journalist Bram Janssen and Cairo photographer Nariman El-Mofty share the Best of the Week award.
for building sources over seven years and gathering footage over eight months to offer an unmatched look inside the restoration of Prague’s 600-year-old astronomical clock, in a spectacular example of visual storytelling. https://bit.ly/2ICZZOu
for writing and shooting both photos and video about a neighborhood art studio – a reconciliation effort to unite a community divided by race and income in “always violent” Chicago. Judges were particularly impressed by Irvine’s creative visual storytelling and unusual photo angles to build a compelling and heartwarming picture of the initiative, with people on both sides of the divide taking steps to connect. https://bit.ly/2ye77flhttps://bit.ly/2NmLiQb
for their exclusive look into Turkey’s role and influence in northern Syria, including the first visit by an international news agency to the Turkish-controlled town of al-Bab. https://yhoo.it/2Ku2rqC
for their reporting that showed there are more than 6.3 billion dead trees around the West fueling this year’s wildfires. http://bit.ly/2xQRQzZ
for their compelling all-formats portrait of a different sports hero: John Young, a Canadian marathoner and triathlete born with dwarfism who inspires people around the planet. https://bit.ly/2qom0IP
for working sources outside the White House to nail down all major aspects of President Donald Trump's long-awaited tariff plan 45 minutes ahead of the pack. http://bit.ly/2tV3U5p
When editors with Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting approached AP with a story on unfair lending practices, data editor Meghan Hoyer and data journalist Angel Kastanis saw an opportunity to use AP’s reach to expand the story and generate real impact.
Starting with 31 million records, representing nearly every mortgage loan application submitted in the U.S. in 2015 and 2016, they found that 50 years after the federal Fair Housing Act, people of color are still denied conventional mortgage loans at rates far higher than their white counterparts. The analysis found a pattern of denials across the country, including in major metropolitan areas.
While Reveal took the lead on the national story, Kastanis and Hoyer took the story deeper. The data distribution they prepared and shared with AP reporters and members showed 61 metro areas where applicants of color were more likely to be denied a conventional home purchase mortgage, even controlling for factors such as income, loan amount and neighborhood.
For taking the story to the next level in a way only AP can, Kastanis and Hoyer receive this week’s $300 Best of the States prize.
for finding that local governments are refusing to reveal their public spending in attempts to draw Amazon’s new headquarters. http://bit.ly/2FxFC3o
How best to capture the story of recovering opioid users?
Chicago-based medical writer Lindsey Tanner and Atlanta-based photographer/videographer David Goldman teamed up to produce an intimate look at a diverse group of people – among them, a lawyer, a businessman and a trucker – who got caught up in the worst opioid epidemic in U.S. history.
Their illuminating package – combining Tanner's powerful text and Goldman's photos with a haunting mini-documentary – earns the Beat of the Week.
“Hi,” the email from Google began, before turning more ominous. “Someone just used your password to try to sign in to your Google Account.” Change your password immediately, it urged, by clicking here. But the email wasn’t actually from Google, and it wasn’t sent randomly. It was from hackers connected to Russia who were targeting Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.
What eventually emerged from the successful hack – thousands of embarrassing emails from campaign chairman John Podesta and others – was widely reported in the summer and fall of 2016. But the anatomy of how that hack occurred had never been revealed, until now. That investigative story, by Raphael Satter, Justin Myers, Jeff Donn and Chad Day, and a companion piece about wider Russian efforts targeting an array of Kremlin opponents, is this week’s Beat of the Week.
for reporting that one current and three former female members of Congress had been sexually harassed or subjected to hostile sexual comments by their male colleagues while serving in the House. http://wapo.st/2hnXw18
for obtaining the GOP’s nine-page tax plan two hours before its official release and confirming key details of the plan ahead of the competition. http://bit.ly/2y1Np7R
for using his deep hurricane expertise to keep AP ahead during our coverage of the latest storms with unique science stories and a stream of videos. http://bit.ly/2gPLnh3