Columbia Journalism School

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Covering American Politics

“I don't want to have my chain yanked. I do not want to report on things in the news because a bad faith actor is driving me to do that. I do not play requests.’”

– Rachel Maddow

2020 duPont-Columbia Award winner and MSNBC host Rachel Maddow talks to Dean Jelani Cobb about the urgency of reporting on the 2024 Presidential election. She also shares advice to young journalists and her take on the state of journalism today.

Donald G. McNeil Jr. with Michael Barbaro in our own "The Daily: This Is Your Life" episode

“I'm sorry to say I knew from the beginning that we weren't going to be able to control this disease, because Americans won't cooperate.” -- Donald G. McNeil Jr.

On our latest episode of On Assignment, The New York Times Science and Health Reporter Donald G. McNeil Jr., 2020 winner of the John Chancellor Award, discusses the rise of his career covering infectious diseases to The Daily host Michael Barbaro.


Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Mark Whitaker on Reconstruction: America After the Civil War

“The greatest enemy of democracy is interference with the right to vote.” -- Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr.

On our latest episode of On Assignment, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. relates his 2020 duPont-winning documentary series Reconstruction: America After the Civil War to events of today with duPont juror Mark Whitaker.

Director John Ridley and his team on uncovering the stories of the 1992 Los Angeles Uprising

“John really insisted on using the word “uprising.” Because as I'm keenly aware, based on my background, one person's riot is another person's uprising, depending on which side of the equation you're sitting.” - ABC News Producer Jeanmarie Condon on the language used in “Let it Fall: Los Angeles 1982-1992.”

This month’s On Assignment podcast revisits the deep reporting behind the 2018 duPont-Award winning documentary, linking the decade up to the Rodney King beating with the 1992 uprising that followed. Director John Ridley and ABC News Producers Jeanmarie Condon, Melia Patria and Fatima Curry discuss the film’s ongoing relevance as America faces a racial reckoning after the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and so many others.