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JSK names U.S. journalism fellows for 2022-23

They will focus on practical solutions to address the journalism industry’s neglect of underserved communities.
Headshots of U.S. and international fellows, class of 2023

The John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships today named eight U.S. Fellows to join the five international fellows previously announced for the class of 2022-2023.

It is the first cohort to return to a residential fellowship program on the Stanford University campus since the start of the pandemic.

The U.S. fellows are veteran and emerging journalism leaders who will work on practical solutions to address the industry’s long-standing neglect of underserved communities. Their projects will address news and information gaps, systemic racism and the deterioration of legacy local news outlets.

“We’re thrilled to be heading back to campus this fall with a diverse group of fellows who have taken the initiative to begin exploring ways to tackle some big issues facing journalism,” said JSK Director Dawn Garcia. “The class includes talented people from big and small newsrooms, entrepreneurs and public media journalists, whose growing organizations are offering alternatives to address expanding local news deserts.”

Focus areas for this year’s cohort include developing sustainable mental health support for journalists; integrating equity in newsroom culture; expanding access to audio journalism for those with hearing impairments; providing systemic support for freelancers of color; exploring ways that video forensics and innovative technologies can increase access to local news and “town square” conversations, and empowering working-class communities of color with information they need to participate in civic life. 

The fellowship runs from Sept. 6, 2022, to May 31, 2023. The fellows will document their work publicly throughout the year, highlighting key strategies and lessons learned. 

Early in the pandemic, JSK pivoted from its long-standing on-campus fellowship and designed a remote program for U.S. journalists working to address news and information gaps in their local underserved and underrepresented communities. During the past two years, JSK supported 21 local journalism leaders with stipends, coaching and peer-to-peer learning via Zoom as they worked in their communities.


“We learned so much from these two years piloting a new model of remote JSK Community Impact Fellowships and the fellows made great progress with their on-the-ground projects to listen, learn and serve the information needs of their local communities of color. We are excited to have JSK Fellows back on campus this fall, and we will also continue exploring ways in the future to help local journalists who serve the information needs in the communities where they live.” — Dawn Garcia, JSK director


JSK provides fellows with several benefits, including a stipend of $95,000, a housing supplement and an additional supplement for fellows with children. JSK also covers Stanford health insurance for fellows, spouses and children. As part of a cohort of innovative journalism leaders, fellows receive individual coaching, participate in  leadership workshops and can sit in on Stanford classes. They have access to the world-class faculty and other resources of Stanford. 

They will join five international fellows already selected for the 2022-2023 academic year. The international fellows are journalists from Ecuador, Guatemala, Kashmir, Philippines and Turkey who had previously committed to the program and could not participate due to the coronavirus pandemic. These international JSK Fellows will pursue a range of innovative ideas that seek to champion press freedom in a world where journalists and independent media are increasingly under attack.

The Class of 2022-2023 joins a thriving JSK community. More than 1,000 people from over 80 countries have participated in journalism fellowships at Stanford since the program first began in 1966.

The U.S. Fellows were selected by the JSK Program Committee, a group of Stanford faculty, staff and journalists, with review by JSK alumni and the fellowship directors. The Program Committee members are: Adam Banks, professor, faculty director, Program in Writing and Rhetoric and the Institute for Diversity in the Arts, Stanford University; Sara Catania, vice president of network strategy, Solutions Journalism Network; Dawn Garcia, JSK director; Sarah Stein Greenberg, executive director, Hasso Plattner Institute of Design, Stanford University; Tonya Mosley, co-host, NPR’s Here & Now; host, Truth Be Told; Marcia Parker, publisher and chief operating officer, CALmatters; Cheryl Phillips, Hearst Professional in Residence, director, Big Local News, Stanford University and Ricardo Sandoval-Palos, public editor, Public Broadcasting Service.

U.S. fellows, JSK Class of 2022-2023

Alex Goldmark headshot

Alex Goldmark — New York, New York 
executive producer, NPR
JSK Journalism Fellow

Alex Goldmark is the executive producer for Planet Money at NPR. During his time at Planet Money, the team launched its weekly broadcast radio show; video shorts series; newsletter; and won a Peabody and a duPont-Columbia award.  At NPR he has overseen the launch of NPR’s first daily podcast, The Indicator, and NPR’s first TikTok channel. He advises on other NPR projects, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning No Compromise series, which was co-hosted by a former student of his (his proudest professional achievement).  Before NPR, Alex was a lead producer for Note To Self, a tech show and podcast produced by WNYC. There he also produced two daily morning news shows, several political call-in talk radio programs and a religion program. As a reporter, his work has appeared on NPR, Marketplace, WNYC and Air America Radio, to name a few.

Martina Guzmán headshot

Martina Guzmán — Detroit, Michigan
race and justice journalist
JSK Journalism Fellow

Martina Guzmán is founder and director of the Race and Justice Reporting Initiative at the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights at Wayne State University Law School in Detroit, Michigan.  As an independent journalist and documentary filmmaker, Martina covers race, justice and systemic inequality. Her work has appeared on NPR, The Guardian, Slate, PBS, Next City among others. Martina was the Detroit correspondent for The Takeaway, a radio news program co-created and co-produced by Public Radio International and WNYC.  Her community reporting with Detroit’s NPR affiliate, WDET, led to her being named Best Statewide Individual Reporter by the Associated Press. Her exploration into the rise and fall of global, post-industrial cities earned her the Best Series Award from the Michigan Broadcasters Association, and Best Investigative Series from the Associated Press of Michigan. In 2019, the Ford Foundation awarded her a grant to investigate the impacts of water shut-offs for women of color in South Africa and Detroit. 

Jake Nicol headshot

Jake Nicol — San Francisco, California 
independent video journalist
JSK Journalism Fellow

Jake Nicol is a national Emmy-nominated multimedia freelance journalist. Much of his work focuses on labor and immigration, reporting extensively from Latin America. He has covered the opioid crisis, hurricanes, wildfires and controversies over public lands ranching. His stories often reveal social and systemic injustice, and are driven by strong characters and surprises.  He has worked as a senior video journalist with The Wall Street Journal in San Francisco. He was also a freelance video producer and writer for National Geographic. Early in his career, Jake helped start a community media center, working as a media educator, project and facility manager, and producer. His stories have appeared in various local and national publications, earning a wide range of accolades including an Edward R. Murrow award and a Society of Professional Journalists award. He has been an Online News Association award finalist and was nominated for a national News & Documentary Emmy. Nicol teaches video journalism and visual storytelling at the UC Berkeley Advanced Media Institute.

Luisa Ortiz Pérez headshot

Luisa Ortiz Pérez — Montclair, New Jersey 
executive director, Vita-Activa.org
JSK Journalism Fellow

Luisa Ortiz Pérez is executive director and co-founder of Vita-Activa.org. There she leads a helpline to aid women and LGBTIQ+ journalists, activists and freedom of expression defenders facing online violence, gender based harassment, stress, trauma and burnout.  She has worked for NPR, WNYC, BBC, Yahoo! Hispanic Americas and Televisa Interactive Media. Luisa participated in the co-production, design and management of inclusive and disruptive MOOCs, courses, workshops, campaigns and media products at a global level for the past 20 years.  She is a mental health advocate, gender-equality champion, civic media expert, social design thinker and a nonviolent decision maker.

Michelle Faust Raghavan headshot

Michelle Faust Raghavan — Portland, Oregon 
equity initiative manager, Solutions Journalism Network
JSK Journalism Fellow

Michelle Faust Raghavan was the Equity Initiative Manager for the Solutions Journalism Network. They work to support respectful and equitable news coverage of the many communities that make up the United States.  Michelle spent about a decade hosting and reporting on policy issues for public media stations across the country. Most recently, they covered health care policy at 89.3 KPCC Southern California Public Radio.  Michelle was awarded the USC Annenberg Data Fellowship in 2018 and was a Maynard 200 Executive Leadership Fellow in 2021. Michelle is passionate about mentorship and is actively involved with NPR’s Next Generation Radio project.

Vinnee Tong headshot

Vinnee Tong — San Francisco, California 
managing editor and director of news, KQED
JSK Journalism Fellow

Vinnee Tong is the managing editor and director of news at KQED. She is part of a leadership team that oversees KQED’s audio and digital newsroom covering the San Francisco Bay Area and California. Vinnee has been leading the newsroom through cultural change to better serve audiences and to prioritize equity when it comes to race, class and gender.  She was part of the founding team that created The Bay, a local news podcast from KQED that highlights underrepresented people and points of view. Previously at KQED, she worked as a producer and editor, covering wildfires, white nationalist rallies, many elections and also the use of the nickname Frisco.  Before KQED, Vinnee was a print reporter at the Associated Press and newspapers. She has won awards for her reporting including a regional RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award, as well as awards from the New York Press Club and the Society of American Business Editors and Writers

Keiona Williamson headshot

Keiona Williamson — Sacramento, California 
founder, DRIP Espresso
JSK Journalism Fellow

Keiona Williamson is the founder of DRIP, an espresso cafe in Sacramento that moonlights as a hub for civic engagement, driving participation in local democracy from its community of customers.  Keiona started her career in journalism as the executive assistant to the Publisher of The New York Times Sunday Magazine. There she worked on the advertising and expanded distribution strategy for The 1619 Project. It showed her the potential of deeply reported journalism led by Black writers, centering on working-class audiences, with support from Black advertising clients and donors to drive readership among audiences traditionally ignored by mainstream media. Keiona went on to build The Equity Lab, a first-of-its-kind initiative for The Sacramento Bee. The Lab was meant to diversify the paper’s historically white, wealthy audience. As a Sacramento native, Keiona is invested in finding and championing solutions to the Central Valley’s challenge with news desserts and mainstream news outlets that are not meeting the needs

Alicia Zuckerman headshot

Alicia Zuckerman — Miami, Florida 
editorial director/executive editor of on-demand audio, WLRN
JSK Journalism Fellow 

Alicia Zuckerman was editorial director/executive editor of on-demand audio at WLRN in Miami. The public radio station won the 2021 national Edward R. Murrow Award for Overall Excellence in large market radio.  She co-created the podcast Tallahassee Takeover, looking at how Florida’s state government increasingly limits local decision-making, and edited the podcast Detention by Design about migration by boat from Haiti and Cuba and the origins of immigration detention policy. She also reported and produced The Sally J. Freedman Reality Tour with Judy Blume, about the author’s years as a child in Miami Beach.  Alicia was an arts reporter at WNYC and New York magazine. Her work has aired on NPR, Here & Now, The World, This American Life and Tablet magazine’s podcast. She has written for the Miami Herald and several magazines.  She was a USC Annenberg/Getty Arts Journalism fellow. Her awards include a national Edward R. Murrow, SPJ Sigma Delta Chi and Third Coast International Audio competition. She is past president of PMJA (Public Media Journalists Association) and has served as a mentor for AIR and the Editors Collective. In 2020, she was honored as Editor of the Year by the SPJ Florida chapter.

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