Ian Urbina

Ian Urbina
2014 Photo of Ian Urbina, reporter for The New York Times.
Born (1972-03-29) March 29, 1972
Alma mater Georgetown University
Occupation Investigative Reporter
Organization The New York Times
Website ianurbina.com

Ian Urbina (born March 29, 1972) is an investigative reporter for The New York Times based in the Washington Bureau. His investigations most often focus on worker safety and the environment. His most recent series, "The Outlaw Ocean" (2015-2016), explored lawlessness on the high seas.


Education and Early Career

Before joining The New York Times in 2003, Urbina was in a doctoral program in history and anthropology at the University of Chicago, where he specialized on Cuba. As a Fulbright scholar he did his doctoral dissertation research in Havana.[1]

During those years, he wrote freelance for The International Herald Tribune, Harper's, The Los Angeles Times and The Christian Science Monitor. He is a regular contributor to NPR.[2] and CSPAN.[3]


The New York Times

Urbina was initially a reporter on the Times' Metro desk. In 2005, Urbina moved to the Times' national desk to become its Mid-Atlantic Bureau chief, where he covered West Virginia coal mining disasters, the Gulf oil spill, the Virginia Tech shootings and numerous other breaking stories. He became a senior investigative reporter for the National Desk in 2010, where he wrote a series in 2011, Drilling Down, about the oil and gas industry and fracking.[4][5][6]

On worker safety, in 2013, he wrote a story about longterm exposure to hazardous chemicals and the federal agency, O.S.H.A., which is responsible for protecting against these workplace threats.[7] For the New York Times Magazine, he wrote in 2014 a piece called "The Secret Life of Passwords", about the anecdotes and emotions hidden in everyday web-user's "secure" passwords.[8]

In 2015, Urbina wrote a series called "The Outlaw Ocean", about lawlessness on the high seas.[9][10][11][12] To report the stories, Urbina traveled through Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, much of that time spent on fishing ships, chronicling a diversity of crimes offshore, including the killing of stowaways, sea slavery, intentional dumping, illegal fishing, the stealing of ships, gun running, stranding of crews, and murder with impunity.[13]

Films/Creative

Several of Urbina's investigative pieces have been adapted to film. In interviews, Matt Damon and John Kransinski have said[14] that the idea for their 2012 film Promised Land came partly from the Times investigative series, Drilling Down.

A 2007 Times investigation by Urbina about so-called "mag crews"—traveling groups of teenagers, many of them runaways or from broken homes, who sell magazine subscriptions—was optioned for a 2015 movie, American Honey, directed by Andrea Arnold and starring Shia LaBeouf.[15]

In 2010, Urbina wrote a profile for Vanity Fair magazine on Sam Childers, a former Hells Angels's biker and gun runner, turned born-again Christian preacher, who joined the guerrilla fighters in South Sudan. Urbina traveled with Childers, after he was ostensibly hired to kill a brutal warlord named Joseph Kony, leader of a group called the Lord's Resistance Army. In 2011, Childers' life story became the basis of a movie called "Machine Gun Preacher", starring Gerard Butler.

Awards

Personal life

Urbina currently lives in the Washington DC area with his family. As a student at St Albans [27] and at Georgetown [28] Urbina was an accomplished long-distance runner. He has degrees in history from Georgetown University and the University of Chicago.[29] He is the son of bi-racial parents. His father is Judge Ricardo M. Urbina, who was also a track stand out and the first Latino on the federal bench in DC.[30][31]

References

  1. "The Lip News, Episode 59". The Lip TV. The Lip TV. Retrieved 1 October 2015. Author Biography for video interview "Modern Slavery on Asia’s Fishing Boats"
  2. "WNYC - People - Ian Urbina". WNYC. WNYC.org. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  3. "Natural Gas Drilling and the Environment". CSPAN. CSPAN. 2011-03-04. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  4. McKibben, Bill (2012-03-08). "Why Not Frack?". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 27 September 2015. McKibben wrote: "In fact, the most remarkable work on the subject has been done by Ian Urbina, a New York Times journalist, and by the rebel filmmaker Josh Fox. Urbina’s stories, which seem likely to win a Pulitzer, demonstrate why we can’t do without serious newspapers. Beginning last spring, he documented the health risks, lax regulation, industry overstatement, and general corruption that have surrounded the boom."
  5. Petit, Charlie. "New York Times Science Times". Knight Science Journalism at MIT. MIT. Archived from the original on June 2, 2012. Retrieved 27 September 2015. Petit wrote: "From here, it appears that the Times and Mr. Urbina are calmly saying we should learn a lesson from the dot-com bubble and the housing bubble, suggesting investers and regulators and gov't planners step with care and not be blinkered by all the money that's pouring in."
  6. Kennedy, Robert F. (2011-10-20). "The Fracking Industry's War on The New York Times and the Truth". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  7. Starkman, Dean. "Three things to like about the Times OSHA exposé". Columbia Journalism Review. Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 27 September 2015. The Columbia Journalism Review called the story a "magisterial probe", and "without doubt a great example of agenda-setting public-interest reporting of a kind that, sad to say, is becoming increasingly scarce among mainstream business news outlets."
  8. Allen, Mike. "@mikeallen". Twitter. Retrieved 30 September 2015. Mike Allen of Politico tweeted about the piece "This @nytimes magazine story will keep you reading til the end "
  9. Murphy, Tim. "Deep Dive". The University of Chicago Magazine. The University of Chicago. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  10. Torrence, Marc. "Murder, Slavery, A Harrowing Chase: Behind the Journalism Series That's Changing the Oceans". Patch.com. Patch Media. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  11. Damanski, Maria. "Quick Take: Growing Momentum to Fight Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing". Talk. Nature.org. Retrieved 27 September 2015. Damanski wrote: "If you haven’t read it, it’s a dramatic exposé about the chronic and widespread violence, oppression and lawlessness that exists out on the open ocean. In the series, Urbina shines an important spotlight on the magnitude of challenges facing ocean management and the need for governments to work together. The last in the series, The Longest Chase, gives us a glimpse into the $10 billion-per-year illegal fishing trade “that is thriving as improved technology has enabled fishing vessels to plunder the oceans with greater efficiency.”
  12. Ryan, Chris (2015-07-20). "‘True Detective,’ Season 2, Episode 5: ‘Other Lives’". Grantland. Retrieved 27 September 2015. Ryan writes, in reference to "The Outlaw Ocean": "The web of holding companies and money; the apathetic, complicit, or handcuffed law-enforcement agencies and bodies of government; and the powerful men who escape any kind of justice — Urbina’s story has all the makings of a True Detective season."
  13. "Long Island University Announces 67th Annual George Polk Awards In Journalism". PR Newswire. PR Newswire. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  14. Karpel, Ari (2013-01-02). "Matt Damon and John Krasinski on making "Promised Land," A Non-Message Message Movie". Fast Company. Retrieved 27 September 2015. Karpel wrote: "After a moment considering the salmon industry, the pair settled on making a movie about hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking. Krasinski was inspired in part by a series of stories in The New York Times, called Drilling Down. Thus, Promised Land, written by and starring Damon and Krasinski, and directed by Gus Van Sant, was born."
  15. Kroll, Justin (2015-04-06). "Shia LaBeouf to Star in Andrea Arnold’s ‘American Honey’". Variety. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  16. Shafir, Doree (2007-04-17). "Bill Keller: Why is this Pulitzer different from all other prizes?". Gawker. Retrieved 27 September 2015. "This year we had three Pulitzer finalists — two of them emanating from that engine of excellence known as the Metro Desk. In the explanatory category, The NYT Staff was a finalist for our national wake-up call on the epidemic of diabetes. Sonny Kleinfield, Richard Perez-Pena, Marc Santora and Ian Urbina kicked off the year with an eye-opening series, and throughout the year we had contributions from other departments, accompanied by great video narratives and slide shows that brought the problem vividly to life."
  17. "Cornellcast". American Studies Program, College of Arts and Sciences. Cornell University. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  18. "Gerald Loeb Awards, 2014 Finalists". UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  19. "The New York Times Nominated For Eight News and Documentary Emmy Awards". NYTCO. The New York Times. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  20. "Long Island University Announces 67th Annual George Polk Awards In Journalism". PRNewswire. PRNewswire. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  21. Helvarg, David. "The Peter Benchley Ocean Award for Media Excellence". National Geographic. National Geographic. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  22. "2015 Best in Business Honoree List". SABEW. Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Retrieved 19 March 2016. "Deep, courageous reporting and compelling writing on an important and under-reported topic. The series of stories, complemented with video and photography, illuminates the unseen costs of a global trading economy that provides inexpensive goods for First World consumers with help from violence, exploitation and environmental damage. The series led the Obama administration and Chilean officials to step up policing efforts to control illegal and environmentally harmful activities on international waters."
  23. "NPPA BEST OF PHOTOJOURNALISM MULTIMEDIA CATEGORY WINNERS ANNOUNCED". NPPA. National Press Photographers Association. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  24. "2015 Sigma Delta Chi Award Honorees". spj.org. Society of Professional Journalists. Retrieved 23 April 2016.
  25. "Scripps Howard Foundation announces winners of 2015 Scripps Howard Awards". PR Newswire. PR Newswire. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
  26. "Award Finalist - Ian Urbina". The Michael Kelly Award. Retrieved 23 April 2016. "In The New York Times series “Outlaw Ocean,” Ian Urbina took readers on an eye-opening journey on the high seas, chronicling how the rule of law too often does not apply to international waters. Reporting from five seas and 14 countries, Urbina revealed that little is done about the thousands of seafarers, fishermen, and migrants who die at sea under suspicious circumstances each year or the unscrupulous shipping firms that intentionally dump enough oil into the oceans to rival the Deepwater Horizon and Exxon Valdez spills. Urbina’s series was brilliantly conceived and expertly told. “This is why we need newspapers,” one reader wrote. Added The Wall Street Journal: “incredible, readable, riveting series.”"
  27. Sonner, Tim (1989-09-28). "Free from pain, St. Albans' Urbina regains momentum". The Washington Post. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  28. Graber, Michael (1994-11-24). "Hoyas men chase 1st National Championship". The Washington Post. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  29. "Author Biography". Macmillan. Macmillan Publishers. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  30. Wilber, Del Quentin (2011-06-01). "Judge who had "no passion for punishment" retires after 31 years". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  31. Gonzalez, Charlie. "TRIBUTE TO HONORABLE RICARDO M. URBINA". Scout - Sunlight Foundation. Sunlight Foundation. Retrieved 4 March 2016.

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