David Gonzalez | |
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Born | New York City, U.S. |
Occupation | Journalist |
Education | Yale University (BS) Columbia University (MS) |
Notable awards | Mike Berger Prize, Columbia University (1992) Distinguished Writing Award, National Association of Hispanic Journalists (2013) |
Website | |
seisdelsur |
David Gonzalez is a journalist atThe New York Times. Among other posts, he has been the Times Bronx Bureau Chief, the "About New York" Columnist, and the Central America and Caribbean Bureau Chief. His coverage has ranged from theOklahoma city bombing andHaiti’s humanitarian crises, to chronicling how theBronx emerged from years of official neglect, to in-depth reports on howLatino immigration is shaping theUnited States.
In addition to his print reporting, Gonzalez is a photographer and the co-editor of theTimes Lens Blog, which has become the premierinternet site forphotojournalists from around the world.[1]
Gonzalez was born in theSouth Bronx ofNew York City. His parents Pedro and Lillian Gonzalez came to New York fromPuerto Rico as teenagers, and Gonzalez received a Catholic School education: first at Saint Athanasius and Saint Martin of Tours grammar schools, then atCardinal Hayes High School, where he was on the track team for four years. He also published his first article in the school’s student newspaper,The Challenger.[2]
At Cardinal Hayes, an English teacher named Bill Kerrigan and Father Jeremiah Monahan were strong and early influences in Gonzalez's development as a writer.Over the years, Gonzalez maintained a lifelong friendship with Father Monahan, until his passing in 1999.[2]
Gonzalez graduated fromYale in 1979 with a bachelor’s degree in psychology, and obtained a master’s degree in journalism from theColumbia University School of Journalism in 1983.[3]
Immediately after graduating from Columbia, Gonzalez joined the staff ofNewsweek magazine, where he filed stories from New York,Detroit andMiami.[3]
In 1990, he joinedThe New York Times as a reporter for their Metro Desk, where he became known for stories focusing on the neighborhoods of New York City, while reflecting on larger social and cultural issues in American society.[3]
From 1995 to 1999, Gonzalez wrote theTimes "About New York" column, identifying and illuminating citywide issues through intimate snapshots of the lives of ordinary New Yorkers, in "prose that was often powerfully affecting."[3] In one memorable column, he portrayed a woman's visit to a garment centersweatshop. As a single mother "she was both father and mother…nor did she have any child care, so she took him to the factory, where he played with the fabric scraps piled up on the floor, bundling them together in make-believeigloos."[3]
From 1999 to 2003, Gonzalez moved to theTimes foreign desk to serve as their Caribbean and Central American Bureau Chief, based inMiami. His area of coverage spanned fromBelize toPanama and included all the islands of the Caribbean – a region of some three dozen countries.[3] Gonzalez often accompanied his stories with his own photographs, as well.[4]
As theTimes citywide columnist from 2004 until 2008, Gonzalez analyzed social and cultural themes. His debut column, a profile of the Nuyorican poet Pedro Pietri, proved to be the artist's last major interview before his 2004 death.[5][failed verification] Another column highlighted the collateral damage caused by predatory lenders in minority neighborhoods, before the nation's subprime collapse.[6]
Until 2011, Gonzalez wrote numerous lengthy narrative pieces on such topics as the children of undocumented immigrants and the role of the arts in community life.[2][7] He also produced several major projects with significant multimedia components for theTimes. This included "House Afire," a three-part series about a strugglingPentecostal storefront church in West Harlem;[8] "A Family Divided by 2 Words, Legal and Illegal, about a family of mixed-immigration status;[9] and "Faces in the Rubble," a personal essay and slide show about Gonzalez's devastated South Bronx neighborhood during the late 70s and early 80s.[10]
"Faces in the Rubble" added a visual dimension to Gonzalez's reporting. For example, along Charlotte Street – which U.S. presidents Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton had used for political photo ops – Gonzalez noted that "an artist wrote BROKEN PROMISES on the same buildings that served as stage sets for politicians to troll for votes."[10]
From 2011 onward, Gonzalez has been theTimes Side Street columnist and the co-editor of theTimes Lens Blog.[11] At "Side Street" he writes and shoots a bi-weekly photo and essay that explores people and places in out-of-the-way corners of New York City.[2] For "Lens Blog" he writes, assigns and edits daily features and slide shows for an online showcase of visual journalism with 850,000 monthly visitors.[12] According to theNational Press Photographers Association, within five years, "Lens Blog has become the 'go to’ site for photojournalists as well as anyone interested in photography.[1]
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Gonzalez has been active photographer since 1979.
In that year, he became the project coordinator forEn Foco, a Latino photographic collective that was an early and vigorous advocate for minority artists.En Foco provided him 24-hour access to adarkroom. In addition to teaching photography to public schoolchildren, Gonzalez took photos of street fairs,block parties, abandoned and burned buildings, and had exhibitions in libraries, bank lobbies, and many other forums.[4]
As Central America/Caribbean Bureau Chief for theTimes, Gonzalez shot many of the photos which accompanied his stories. His photos from the 2001El Salvador earthquake, by themselves, occupied nearly an entire page in the Sunday edition of theTimes.[4]
His photo essay "Faces in the Rubble" sparked tremendous reader interest when it was the cover of theTimes Sunday Metropolitan section in August, 2009.[2]
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In 2009, Gonzalez and five fellow photographers – Angel Franco, Joe Conzo Jr., Ricky Flores, Francisco Molina Reyes II, and Edwin Pagán – formed a collective known asSeis del Sur (Six from the South), with the shared goal of documenting the life of the South Bronx which they had all witnessed, particularly from the 1970s through the early 1990s.[13]
In January 2013,Seis del Sur had its first exhibition at the Bronx Documentary Center. The January 19 opening was an overwhelming success with a crowd that included musician Afrika Bombaataa, actress Annabelle Sciorra, the artists of Tats Cru, and former Bronx Borough PresidentFernando Ferrer. The group's goal was to show – as insiders – the complexity of life in the South Bronx, especially during the years it was hit hard by arson and abandonment. Speaking to the opening night crowd, Gonzalez said, "This is our family album. These are our family pictures. It’s just that we’ve got a complicated family."[13] The following six weeks featured standing-room-only screenings, and panel discussions every weekend.
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In a career at theTimes which spans three decades, Gonzalez has become recognized for the range and depth of his work – including reports on terrorism inLatin America,[14] the aftermath of civil war in El Salvador,[15] deficiencies in theU.S. census,[16] the health crisis amongstNicaraguan sugar cane workers,[17] arson and devastation in the South Bronx,[10] and the photography of Jack Delano[18][19] andWalker Evans.[20]
In 1992, Gonzalez received Columbia University's Mike Berger Award for his coverage of New York City and its neighborhoods.[11]
In 1997, he was named as one of the "Nations 100 Most Influential Hispanics" by Hispanic Business magazine.[21]
In 2000, he received the Feature Writing Award from theNational Association of Hispanic Journalists for "Game Produces 28 Hits and a Political Home Run," about a baseball game between theCuban andVenezuelan national teams.[3]
In 2008, he received the Distinguished Writing Award from theAmerican Society of Newspaper Editors for "House Afire," his three-part series on the life of a struggling Pentecostal storefront church.[11][22]
In 2013, he was inducted into the National Association of Hispanic Journalists Hall of Fame.[21]
Gonzalez was named a Media Trailblazer by the Center for Puerto Rican Studies atHunter College.[23]
His feature writing has been honored twice by Columbia University's Workshops on Race and Ethnicity, and by theAssociated Press.[2]
Gonzalez also received the New York Associated Press award for feature writing.[22]
The following awards received by David Gonzalez were reported by theNational Association of Hispanic Journalists.[21]