P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting cover
P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting cover
Peer-to-Peer

P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting

P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting

28min |07/04/2023
Play
P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting cover
P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting cover
Peer-to-Peer

P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting

P2P #6 - Ed Yong on gender bias and the need for more diversity in health reporting

28min |07/04/2023
Play

Description

Before becoming a writer, Ed Yong studied zoology then biochemistry, but realized that he’d rather explain science to others than be a scientist. Today, he’s an award-winning journalist and author, notably known for his writing on the world of animals and the Covid-19 pandemic (for which he received a Pulitzer Prize in 2021).


In 2018, Ed published an article titled “I Spent Two Years Trying to Fix the Gender Imbalance in My Stories.” More than five years later, we wanted to check in with him.


What process did he put in place? How did it change his reporting? And is this something that stuck with him over the years? He tells us about all of that, and shares some of the things he wishes he had known before he started writing health stories in which women are the protagonists, and calls on other male journalists to strive for more diversity in their own reporting.


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Description

Before becoming a writer, Ed Yong studied zoology then biochemistry, but realized that he’d rather explain science to others than be a scientist. Today, he’s an award-winning journalist and author, notably known for his writing on the world of animals and the Covid-19 pandemic (for which he received a Pulitzer Prize in 2021).


In 2018, Ed published an article titled “I Spent Two Years Trying to Fix the Gender Imbalance in My Stories.” More than five years later, we wanted to check in with him.


What process did he put in place? How did it change his reporting? And is this something that stuck with him over the years? He tells us about all of that, and shares some of the things he wishes he had known before he started writing health stories in which women are the protagonists, and calls on other male journalists to strive for more diversity in their own reporting.


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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Description

Before becoming a writer, Ed Yong studied zoology then biochemistry, but realized that he’d rather explain science to others than be a scientist. Today, he’s an award-winning journalist and author, notably known for his writing on the world of animals and the Covid-19 pandemic (for which he received a Pulitzer Prize in 2021).


In 2018, Ed published an article titled “I Spent Two Years Trying to Fix the Gender Imbalance in My Stories.” More than five years later, we wanted to check in with him.


What process did he put in place? How did it change his reporting? And is this something that stuck with him over the years? He tells us about all of that, and shares some of the things he wishes he had known before he started writing health stories in which women are the protagonists, and calls on other male journalists to strive for more diversity in their own reporting.


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Description

Before becoming a writer, Ed Yong studied zoology then biochemistry, but realized that he’d rather explain science to others than be a scientist. Today, he’s an award-winning journalist and author, notably known for his writing on the world of animals and the Covid-19 pandemic (for which he received a Pulitzer Prize in 2021).


In 2018, Ed published an article titled “I Spent Two Years Trying to Fix the Gender Imbalance in My Stories.” More than five years later, we wanted to check in with him.


What process did he put in place? How did it change his reporting? And is this something that stuck with him over the years? He tells us about all of that, and shares some of the things he wishes he had known before he started writing health stories in which women are the protagonists, and calls on other male journalists to strive for more diversity in their own reporting.


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Share

Embed

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