Meet John Branch
(Busā89, MJourā96) ā¢ĢżSportswriter ā¢ĢżPulitzer Prize Winner
John Branch isnāt your average sports writer. Heās written front page stories forĢżThe New York TimesĢżthat reveal how groundskeepers for Major League Baseball stadiumsĢżĢżinto the grass, examine theĢżĢżof pioneering BASE jumpers andĢżĢżof the field-sized flags that fly at major sporting events.
In 2013, Branch won a Pulitzer Prizeāthe most prestigious award in journalismāfor his article ā,ā a pioneering effort in multimedia journalism, which tells the story of a deadly avalanche in the backcountry of a Washington ski resort. āEvery day Iām amazed that I get paid to do what I do,ā he says of his job.
Branch has accomplished a great deal in sports writing, especially for someone who began his career as a business reporter. Two years into his first job at The Colorado Springs Gazette, one of the paperās sportswriters died suddenlyā¦ āyeah, Iāll go try that.ā āā
āI have license and liberty to go where most people arenāt welcome.ā
-John Branch
Even now, being open to unexpected ideas is key, as Branch seeks story ideas in unusual places. āSometimes I just step back away from the press box and ask, āwhy is this happening this way?āāā He even gets some story ideas from questions his kids ask. Whatever story he pursues, he focuses on the human elementāa tactic that led him to refine āSnowfallā from a broad article on avalanches into a detailed story about a single slide and the group of skiers it swallowed.
Branch believes such flexibility and focus are crucial in journalism, especially for young journalists. āWe have no idea what this journalism world will look like in 10 years, so you need to be open-minded,ā he explains. The role of CMCIās journalism department āis to open as many doors as possible. And itās the studentās role to walk through those doors.ā