As a freelance writer and editor, I’ve contributed to the BBC, City & Shore, Garden & Gun, the Globe & Mail, Flamingo, Food & Wine, The Guardian, Men’s Health, Outside, StarChefs, Time Out, and Wondery.
My projects include long-form investigations, in-depth magazine features, travel pieces, restaurant reviews, international business reporting, and writing and reporting a chart-topping true crime podcast. I’ve covered politics, travel, and social issues in multiple countries, from Japan to Haiti. In addition to awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and the National Education Writers Association, I’ve received fellowships from Foreign Press Center Japan and the International Center for Journalists.
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Flamingo: The Miracle Bringing Radiant Light to the Center for Great Apes
Since the beginning, the Center for Great Apes has used birth control to make sure the apes don’t reproduce. That’s the point of the place, to help end the captivity of great apes, to give the rescues a pleasant place under shady oak trees to live out their days. But sometimes birth control doesn’t work. Sometimes there’s a miracle.
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Men's Health: VicBlends Will Give You a Free Haircut—and So. Much. More.
Doom-scrolling through TikTok nonsense is how all of us found VicBlends. In most of his clips, Victor Fontanez, 25, is outside somewhere, walking up to strangers. “I'm a barber and I give out free haircuts. I would love to bless you.” There’s an affectation to his voice that says hip-hop rap battles. During haircuts ...
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Garden & Gun: What It’s Really Like to Fix Up a Crumbling Log Cabin
There I stood, in my “dream cabin,” freezing on a late winter morning, balancing on a stack of boxes as bulky as a loveseat. The cardboard shifted beneath me. As I raised the shovel, my palms sweated against the wooden handle. Construction workers peered in through the window. No way they were coming back in. Not until …
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Flamingo: The Risky Rebirth of of The Greatest Show on Earth
George Caceres does not look like a man about to risk his life. He’s casually shaking out his arms, letting them flail at his side like hooked mackerel. As calm as the Intracoastal on a windless morning, he straightens his white spandex shorts, pulling them down …
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Time Out: Why is it so damn hard to open a restaurant in Miami?
Vikram Thadani first came to Miami from Chile on vacation when he was 17, and he swore right then that someday he’d open a restaurant here. That was in 2002, and after opening four restaurants back home, he decided in 2021 he’d attempt to pull off his dream. Eighteen months later, after endless red tape …
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Wondery: Over My Dead Body Season 4: Gone Hunting
When Mike Williams vanishes on a hunting trip, authorities presume he was eaten by alligators. But one woman begins to suspect the true predators may lurk much closer to home. It sets her on a tireless crusade to uncover what really happened to Mike.
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Men's Health: Could Scot Peterson Have Stopped the Parkland School Shooting?
The day 17 people were shot to death inside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the only armed officer on the property stood outside, apparently doing nothing. He can explain, and he does—at length. Is he trying to convince the victims’ parents? The survivors? Other cops? Or himself?
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StarChefs: A Friendship Between a Fresh-Faced Kid and a Godfather of Cocktails
In the early days of his bar, before he even opened the doors, Harrison Snow would shake up a new creation and slide it down the bar. Sitting at the end was Brother Cleve, a legend in the bar scene. Born Robert Toomey, Cleve was a musician, DJ, and bartender. Legend goes that Cleve discovered classic cocktails…
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Globe & Mail: Meet the Canadian champion who knew pickleball was cool before LeBron James
There’s a look people get when they see somebody famous, a hero or a sports legend. The woman who approached had it -- eyes wide, smile stuck on high, an equal mix of awe and excitement. “Could I, is it OK, can I ask, a photo,” the woman stammered shyly.
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Flamingo: Can We Really Salvage the James Beard Awards?
The New York Times came to town in 2008, and Scott Joseph hoped Orlando would finally get some recognition. Joseph reviewed local restaurants for the Orlando Sentinel for 20 years. Now he runs the city’s definitive dining guide, the suitably named Scott Joseph’s Orlando Restaurant Guide. It’s frustrating …
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Men's Health: This Chef Has a Secret Recipe for Dropping More Than 170 Pounds
Ten hours before chef Michael Beltran, 36, begins an all-night shift at his acclaimed Miami seafood restaurant Navé, he backs his ’61 Cadillac out of the garage and then slips on a pair of boxing gloves to start his day off right. Soon he’s striking his gloved fists into mitts held by trainer Jacob Hasbrouck as they spin on a concrete floor …
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Outside: How ATVs Are Reviving a Forgotten Region of Appalachia
West Virginia has the highest average elevation of any state east of the Mississippi. That’s not due to the mountains—its tallest peak is still lower than Denver—but the hills that roll out like endless moguls. More than a century ago, towns rose up in the valleys, built from coal fortunes. In the late 1800s, the city of Bramwell used to …
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Men's Health: At 54D, You Have 54 Days to Make Gains or Get Out
In the depths of it, Rodrigo Garduño wouldn't even leave his house. Garduño had played soccer since he was four and signed his first pro contract with the Mexican team Necaxa at age 16. But after a contract dispute in 2007, he ended up retiring earlier than he expected. At just 29 years old, his pro sports career was over, and …
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Flamingo: The Forgotten General Who Created Osceola
Billy Powell didn’t become a hero or a mass murderer—which version you hear depends on who’s telling his story—until he walked among all those dead bodies. Almost everyone he had ever known died that Saturday, July 27, 1816. Two hundred and seventy bodies lay strewn about—soldiers, babies, mothers, kids like …
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Food & Wine: How to Throw a Louisiana Crawfish Boil (Even If You’re Landlocked)
When Tony and Abby Sharamitaro helped throw a church fund-raiser last summer, they wanted to offer more than just brats and burgers on the grill. They settled on a Louisiana crawfish boil. The only problem: The Sharamitaros live a day’s drive from fresh Gulf seafood. So the morning of the party, a friend drove to the …
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Men's Health: The Truth About Orangetheory's Billion-Dollar Fitness Empire
For most of his life, Anthony Abbate faced a dire reality. No man on either side of his family had lived beyond his 50s, mainly because of heart issues. It hung over Abbate like a time bomb: He was unlikely to see his 60th birthday. As he got older, doctors urged Abbate to begin a workout routine that got his heart pumping. But …
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Time Out: The 10 Miami restaurants worthy of Michelin stars
The Michelin Guide finally arrives in Miami in 2022, correcting a vile oversight of a city, we’d argue, with one of the finest food scenes anywhere. To help them get started, we compiled a list of deserving Miami restaurants. Our initial list started with a whole lot of deserving spots, like about 30, seriously. Then we ruled out …
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Outside: Cornhole Is a Pro Sport Now and We All Just Have to Accept That
A big man who usually has an unhurried gait, Stacey Moore picked up his pace to a near jog. It was, after all, what could be one of the most important nights of his life. Wearing a blue-and-white-striped dress shirt and black slacks, Moore led me through a maze of hallways connecting Pennsylvania’s Valley Forge Casino …
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BBC: How a fast-food marketing campaign turned into a widespread Yuletide tradition
Every Christmas, Ryohei Ando gathers his family together for a holiday tradition. Just like their father did as a child, his two children will reach deep into a red-and-white bucket and pick out the best piece of fried chicken they can find. Every Christmas season, an estimated 3.6 million Japanese families treat themselves …
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Outside: This Florida Thru-Hike Is Not for the Faint of Heart
Everyone told Tom Kennedy to expect flooded trails when he hiked through Big Cypress National Preserve in the spring of 2015. But as he sloshed through miles of waist-deep swamp water that hid alligators and aggressive snakes, the trail quickly got the better of him. Right from the start, at the Oasis Visitor Center, in the …
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The Guardian: Gun culture thrives in Florida town ravaged by shooting at teen event
When Jason Moore heard about the shooting in a Fort Myers, Florida, nightclub that killed two and injured more than a dozen others, his reaction was immediate. He had the employees at his gun shop move roadside signs to just outside the club’s parking lot that said: “We come to you, concealed weapon permit.” …
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Outside: Your Carbon Fiber Bike May Be a Ticking Time Bomb
Janet Kowal had a personal connection to the Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa (RAGBRAI). Even though she’s now living outside Chicago, working for the Village of Burr Ridge town hall, Kowal has Iowa in her blood. The 2013 route would take her through her hometown of Des Moines and skirt …