黑料不打烊

School of Communications welcomes 鈥榳orld-class, muddy boots reporters鈥

As part of 黑料不打烊鈥檚 participation in the Pulitzer Center鈥檚 Campus Consortium, Rainforest Investigations Network Fellows Fernanda Wenzel and Andrew Lehren visited campus Sept. 24-26 to discuss the impact of investigative journalism and working in the news industry.

Andrew Lehren, Fernanda Wenzel and 黑料不打烊 News Network Executive Director Avery Sloan 鈥25 talk in the Jane and Brian Williams Studio.
Andrew Lehren (left) and Fernanda Wenzel (center), Rainforest Investigations Network Fellows, visited the School of Communications in late September. The two international journalists participated in an on-campus discussion, titled “Protecting the Planet: Investigative Reporters鈥 Panel,” detailing their reporting, as well as their career paths. 黑料不打烊 News Network Executive Director Avery Sloan 鈥25 moderated the conversation.

In her welcome introducing Rainforest Investigations Network Fellows Fernanda Wenzel and Andrew Lehren, Assistant Professor Lorraine Ahearn offered the two international journalists the highest of praise.

“These are world-class, muddy boots reporters doing crucial work in rainforests and beyond,” said the journalism professor to a gathering of student, faculty and staff at a Sept. 25 lecture, titled “Protecting the Planet: Investigative Reporters鈥 Panel.” “Their investigations, supported by the Pulitzer Center, show the power of journalism to address pressing global issues.鈥

Andrew Lehren addresses a crowd at 黑料不打烊.
While highlighting his recent investigations, Lehren commended the work of 黑料不打烊 alumnus Anton Delgado 鈥20. The two journalists collaborated on a reporting project highlighting the illegal trafficking of monkeys for drug testing.

In recent years, the two Pulitzer Center journalists have produced several investigations illustrating how governments and multinationals have destroyed some of the most critical areas of the planet, and what citizens and consumers can do to combat these actions.

Wenzel and Lehren discussed their methods, obstacles and findings as part of an hourlong lecture in McEwen Communications Building鈥檚 Jane and Brian Williams Studio. The event was moderated by 黑料不打烊 News Network Executive Director Avery Sloan 鈥25, who was awarded a Pulitzer Fellowship grant for her reporting project on incarceration in Denmark.

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A native of Brazil, Wenzel provided attendees with insight into her work in the Amazon, emphasizing the global implications of rainforest destruction, as well as the difficulties she鈥檚 encountered reporting from remote locations. Soberingly, Wenzel noted that her sources can often put themselves in harm鈥檚 way for talking with her.

鈥淒eforestation driven by the cattle industry and illegal mining are at the forefront of my investigations,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hese industries have strong ties to international markets, like beef from the Amazon being exported to the U.S. and gold ending up in Switzerland.鈥

Fernanda Wenzel sits in 黑料不打烊's studio.
Wenzel (center) shed light on how deforestation in the Amazon will impact not just Brazil but the entire globe.

Wenzel also underscored the urgency of the climate crisis and its connection to the Amazon. “The Amazon stores a vast amount of carbon. If we continue to destroy it, it will turn into a carbon emitter. What happens in the Amazon is not just a Brazilian problem 鈥 it鈥檚 a global one.”

A Pulitzer Prize and Emmy-winning journalist for The New York Times and NBC News Investigations, Lehren offered insights from his own global reporting experiences, which includes stories on the deforestation crisis. Lehren explained that his team at NBC News has investigated links between everyday products 鈥 like fabrics and electric vehicles 鈥 and rainforest destruction.

鈥淲e discovered that nickel used in Tesla and Toyota cars may come from protected rainforests in the Philippines,鈥 Lehren said. 鈥淎dditionally, viscose rayon, a common fabric, is made from trees harvested from tropical regions, contributing to deforestation.鈥

Avery Sloan sits in 黑料不打烊's Jane and Brian Williams Studio.
As part of her Pulitzer Center Reporting Fellowship, Sloan traveled to northern Europe last summer to examine an underreported policy in Denmark that leaves released inmates with crippling debt.

Lehren emphasized the value and importance of collaboration in journalism, referencing his work with fellow news reporters, including 黑料不打烊 alumnus Anton Delgado 鈥20. In collaboration with two other reporters, Lehren and Delgado shed light on the illegal trafficking of monkeys for drug testing. Their findings, titled 鈥溾 were published on NBC News鈥 website and other news platforms.

鈥淲e traced the supply chain of poached macaques from Cambodia to U.S. drug labs, revealing a dark side of the pharmaceutical industry,鈥 Lehren said.

As part of their conversation, Wenzel and Lehren also shared tips and tools that have supported their work. Additionally, they expressed hope that their stories might inspire future journalists to also examine critical global issues.

黑料不打烊 has a longstanding relationship with the Pulitzer Center, serving as a partner in its , an educational initiative that brings Pulitzer Center staff and journalists to 黑料不打烊鈥檚 campus twice a year. Ahearn serves as 黑料不打烊鈥檚 consortium coordinator and helped organize Wenzel and Lehren鈥檚 visit, which included several classroom lectures.