June 29, 2017
Beat of the Week
(Honorable Mention)
In Argentina, women fight back against gender-based violence
for an all-formats project on a grassroots movement to combat violence against women in Argentina. http://apne.ws/2sigN6F
for an all-formats project on a grassroots movement to combat violence against women in Argentina. http://apne.ws/2sigN6F
Sarah Rankin and Steve Helber were covering a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia when chaos broke out. The marchers and counter protesters â Rankinâs words â ââthrew punches, screamed, set off smoke bombs. They hurled water bottles, balloons of paint, containers full of urine. They unleashed chemical sprays. Some waved Confederate flags. Others burned them.ââ
Rankin and Helber were the first of many AP colleagues to cover the story, and their initial work paid off in significant ways.
had exclusive behind-the-scenes access during top-ranked South Carolinaâs run to the womenâs NCAA championship, the pair delivering unique content in the highly competitive environment of the gameâs biggest stage.South Carolina sports writer Iacobelli has established a good rapport with basketball coach Dawn Staley, who allowed him to join the team during the Final Four in Minneapolis. He teamed up with Des Moines, Iowa-based photographer Charlie Neibergall to produce a widely used package that moved the morning after the Gamecocks captured their second national title under Staley.Read more
developed a nuanced story around the lives of women struggling to raise awareness of the threat posed by COVID-19 in one of the worldâs least developed nations, where the virus and its effects are hidden and often overlooked.Tests, vaccines and public messaging around COVID-19 often miss many of Burkina Faso's 20 million people, despite $200 million budgeted for virus response. In a region where women are responsible for family work and community relationships, theyâve stepped up to provide information and resources amid the public health crisis and economic hardship. With funding through a grant provided by the European Journalism Centre, the AP was able to identify the women who could best share their stories with APâs audience.But this positive story, simple in inception, was challenging to tell at first. Stringer reporter Sam Mednick writes: â... COVID hasn't been front and center in Burkina Faso . ... it was really hard to find people who could speak to it since there are so many other problems they have to contend with. Once we found the (subjects of the) story I think the challenge was gaining the womenâs trust, bringing their stories to life in a way that did them justice as well as highlighted the situation in the country.âThe story achieved that, exploring the lives of two women in Kaya, a conflict area outside the capital. The package took readers deep into the lives of these women and their communities and explored how their individual efforts make them leaders in the global work against the coronavirus, as vital to their community as politicians and scientists.Video by West Africa senior producer Yesica Fisch was used by key AP clients around the world, and along with photos by freelancer Sophie Garcia, complemented the text, elevating the presentation designed by digital storytelling producer Natalie Castañeda.https://aplink.news/nnmhttps://aplink.photos/1m8https://aplink.video/wj2
launched APâs grant-funded year-long series on the pandemicâs impact on women in Africa's least developed nations with this ambitious multiformat project. They tell the uplifting story of the women fish processors of Bargny, Senegal, and their tale of survival amid the economic hardships imposed by the pandemic.The package exemplified the very best in AP all-formats storytelling: stunning visual journalism complementing the reporting and driving readers and viewers deeper into the story of the womenâs cooperative work to support a community through the toughest of times.The Dakar-based West Africa team of photographer Leo Correa, correspondent Carley Petesch and senior producer Yesica Fisch initially spent weeks working tirelessly to make contacts and gain the trust of the women as they waited for the fishing season to finally begin. Their reporting let the women's voices tell their story â and the visuals put you on the beach as they work laying out the catch, smoking the fish under smoldering peanut shells.Deep storytelling like this also took a team of editors and producers to make the work sing. Digital storytelling producer Nat Castañeda, deputy news director/U.S. South Janelle Cogan, Beirut-based producer Hend Kortam and chief photographer/Africa Jerome Delay collaborated across continents and were essential to the success of the package, delivering video edits, photo galleries, digital production and text tailored to meet client needs.Major European client France24's Journal d'Afrique editor wrote: âThe visuals of the Senegal story are among the best Iâve seen in recent years from one of the main agencies.âhttps://aplink.news/h5bhttps://aplink.photos/4zohttps://aplink.video/gj1
Shootings in Chicago have captured national headlines, and for good reason: The city has among the highest rates of teenage gun violence in the nation. But where else in the U.S. are teenagers most likely to be killed or injured by gunfire? Baltimore, Detroit, Los Angeles?
In an exclusive analysis, journalists from the AP, working jointly with the USA Today Network, arrived at an unexpected answer: Except for Chicago, the places with the highest rates of teen gun violence in America are smaller and mid-sized cities â towns like Wilmington, Delaware, population 72,000.
AP data journalists Meghan Hoyer and Larry Fenn led the analysis of 3Âœ yearsâ worth of shooting cases provided by the nonprofit Gun Violence Archive. Baltimore reporter Juliet Linderman, with significant assists from Albany reporter Michael Hill and Savannah correspondent Russ Bynum, picked it up from there. Video journalist Allen Breed produced a powerful video that illustrates the danger and despair, along with the difficulties that WIlmington is having in addressing the problems. The package also was enhanced with graphics from interactives producer Maureen Linke.
For their work revealing a surprising side of teenage gun violence in America, state reporters Linderman, Bynum and Hill, video journalist Breed, data journalists Hoyer and Fenn, and graphic artist Linke share this weekâs Best of the States award.
As parents scramble to manage their own work and their kidsâ remote learning during the pandemic, AP business reporters Alexandra Olson and Cathy Bussewitz wanted to know how that shift impacted the careers of mothers and fathers.
They dug into the data, finding that in order to tend to their children, working mothers were giving up their careers more so than working fathers. And they tapped into parenting networks to find families in this situation. What emerged was evidence of a trend that threatens decades of hard-fought gains by working women, who are still far from achieving labor force parity with men.
For timely reporting that documents a disturbing social and economic trend brought on by the pandemic, Olson and Bussewitz win this weekâs Best of the States award.
for scoring exclusive interviews with the ex-girlfriend of a man sentenced for making fake bomb threats against Jewish centers, who said she was stalked and terrorized by him for almost a year. http://bit.ly/2G3usUr
for pressing police for public records, breaking news on fresh sexual misconduct accusations against casino magnate Steve Wynn. http://bit.ly/2Fg9z7f
have delivered a steady stream of all-formats coverage amid Haitiâs escalating violence as gangs consolidate power in the countryâs capital. Despite daily kidnappings and the widespread violence, APâs reporting continues at great personal risk. This enterprising story focuses on survivors who lost loved ones and their homes as the gangs fight each other, seizing territory in Port-au-Prince.The team on the ground reported the harrowing stories of families taking shelter in squalid conditions â many of the people initially reluctant to talk for fear of being killed â and visited one neighborhood at the center of the most recent gang war to show charred homes â some still containing the remains of people who did not escape.Read more
Itâs a subject that has been largely ignored by the public and mainstream press in the U.S.: the plight of thousands of missing and murdered Native American women across the country.
Albuquerque reporter Mary Hudetz and national enterprise journalists Sharon Cohen and David Goldman teamed up to deliver an impressive all-formats package that illuminated these tragedies, engaging readers on one of the busiest news days in recent memory and earning praise from the industry.
For their efforts, Hudetz, Goldman and Cohen win this weekâs Best of the States award.
Kamil Zihnioglu has seen lots of protests while working as a photo stringer for The Associated Press in Paris, but these campaigns were different, focused on a dark, unreconstructed side of an otherwise progressive France.
Every time a woman is killed by her partner, hundreds of activists take to the streets under cover of night to plaster signs decrying the deaths and pleading for government action.
But Zihnioglu wanted to tell the story behind the protests. He spent weeks gaining the activistsâ trust, and he teamed up with visiting video journalist Mstyslav Chernov to tell their story. Meanwhile, reporter Claire Parker and the Paris video team of Catherine Gaschka and Oleg Cetinic produced a powerful all-format package digging into deadly domestic violence in France.
For bringing attention to an issue that is often ignored, Kamil Zihnioglu, Claire Parker, Mystslav Chernov, Catherine Gaschka and Oleg Cetinic win APâs Best of the Week.
used sources developed over years of covering women's college basketball to obtain closely guarded details of NCAA referee pay.The result: an unmatched exclusive revealing that half of the Division I conferences paid referees for women's hoops 22% less on average than they paid officials working menâs games.Read more
drew on experience and stamina for comprehensive all-formats coverage of the worst civil unrest in the country's post-apartheid history.Starting with a weeklong stakeout and fast, accurate reporting on the midnight arrest of former President Jacob Zuma for contempt of court, the story quickly shifted: Zumaâs supporters burned trucks on a main highway, blocking it and severing the port city Durban from other parts of the country â the first sign of worse trouble to come.With violence spreading to various locations through KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng provinces, leaving scores of people dead, the crew of staff and freelancers delivered strong, distinctive visuals, including multiple video edits, live video of rioting at a Soweto mall, drone images and dramatic photos despite attacks on journalists.Amid the chaos, multiple reports of violence, deaths, looting were deftly edited day after day into a comprehensive report that also provided political and societal context referencing South Africaâs underlying economic problems. The story ââI was in tearsâ: South Africans take stand against riotingâ stands out in the weekâs strong body of work.https://aplink.news/qqjhttps://aplink.news/436https://aplink.news/brxhttps://aplink.video/q6ghttps://aplink.video/uchhttps://aplink.video/6uk
Georgia's centralized and aging election system has been the subject of several controversies â most recently in June, when a whistleblower revealed that state contractors had failed to secure an important election server. Hackers could potentially have affected the results of both 2016 races and a special congressional election last June that drew national attention.
The Houston bureauâs Frank Bajak wrote up the initial news of Georgiaâs server problem. But that didn't answer the larger question of whether the vulnerable server had actually been hacked, so Bajak developed new sources and kept pressing for more information.
His efforts paid off when a source provided him with an email disclosing that the troubled server had been wiped clean of all data. Even more interesting, this destruction of evidence happened just a few days after a lawsuit was filed seeking a forensic examination of the server in an effort invalidate the state's vulnerable election technology.
For his enterprise and dogged pursuit of the story behind the story, Bajak wins this weekâs Best of the States award.
It was a tide of humanity that just kept getting larger.
Driven from their homes by mass violence after a clash between insurgents and police, Rohingya Muslims from a borderland state in Buddhist-majority Myanmar streamed into neighboring Bangladesh where they faced homelessness, more potential violence and deeply uncertain futures.
Day after excruciating day, an AP team of journalists on both sides of the border painted a portrait of human misery and the hope that always lurks within it â and cast doubt on claims by Myanmarâs government that Rohingya villagers set fire to their own homes.
For their work to focus the worldâs attention on the Rohingyaâs exodus, Delhi staffers â photographer Bernat Armangue, correspondent Muneeza Naqvi and video journalist Al-emrun Garjon â and Myanmar correspondent Esther Htusan win this weekâs Beat of the Week award.
reported in all formats over several months to tell the important story of women in Malawi going without prenatal care during the pandemic, undoing progress in improving maternal health in one of the worldâs poorest nations.The freelance trioâs commitment earned them access to birthing rooms, nursing colleges, and, most challengingly, to camera-averse traditional (and officially illegal) midwives to create a visually powerful, character-driven package. The story was anchored by powerful detail â bus fare to the hospital is more expensive than medical care â and brought to life by intimate photos, including a mother and her newborn minutes after giving birth. In a country where hospitals are so bare that women are expected to bring their own razor blades for cutting their babiesâ umbilical cords, the AP showed how deepening poverty brought on by the pandemic is further imperiling womenâs lives.The tender, deeply reported package was initiated by photographer Chikondi, with text reporting by Gondwe and video by Jali, the team supported in all formats by AP staffers internationally.https://aplink.news/5ryhttps://aplink.video/8sh
for breaking the story of how a Texas town was given a federal contract to operate a controversial family detention and in turn gave a hefty management contract to a private prison company, retaining a portion of the money for itself. https://bit.ly/2JjTkJx
for a thoughtfully produced global photo gallery that shows what itâs like to grow up female in 2018. https://bit.ly/2OwGKw3
for scooping even the Greek media with news that the Greek government plans to introduce a floating barrier to stop migrants from reaching the countryâs islands from nearby Turkey.Gatopoulos noticed a mention of the floating barrier idea on a fringe website, then trawled through Greeceâs labyrinthine online portal until he found the original document with technical details of the floating fence. He eventually managed to get official confirmation from the defense ministry even though the project still hadn't been officially announced. https://bit.ly/31ruGzs