Sam Wolson (@samwolson) 's Twitter Profile
Sam Wolson

@samwolson

Emmy and Peabody winning director / Interactives Visual Features Editor @newyorker

ID: 83989810

linkhttp://www.SamWolson.com calendar_today21-10-2009 03:16:18

290 Tweet

548 Followers

1,1K Following

Nicole Sealey (@nic_sealey) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Immense gratitude to Kevin Young and Hannah Aizenman at The New Yorker for this gorgeous treatment of an excerpt from my forthcoming collection, THE FERGUSON REPORT: AN ERASURE! newyorker.com/magazine/2023/…

The New Yorker (@newyorker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In a new interactive poem, Nicole Sealey creates a breathtaking sequence that reimagines the Department of Justice’s investigation of the Ferguson Police Department following the tragic events that occurred in 2014. nyer.cm/EIhv6rS

Pulitzer Center (@pulitzercenter) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 2022, the documentary 'Reeducated' by grantees Ben Mauk and Sam Wolson received the first interactive and immersive media Peabody Awards. Check this virtual-reality documentary that gives a glimpse inside one of Xinjiang’s secret detention camps. 📹bit.ly/2VOz3WH🎥

Kyle Chayka (@chaykak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My latest for @newyorker is this interactive “Touchstones” column on Wong Kar Wai’s “In the Mood for Love” — the way its beautiful aesthetic has become ubiquitous online but its deeper meaning kind of lost newyorker.com/culture/touchs…

The New Yorker (@newyorker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

.Kyle Chayka explores the iconic 2000 film “In The Mood for Love”—a movie whose aesthetic has inspired many movies since and even a popular social-media trend. nyer.cm/7Zc9e07

Ian Urbina (@ian_urbina) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Crimes Behind the Seafood You Eat: China has invested heavily in an armada of far-flung fishing vessels, in part to extend its global influence. This maritime expansion has come at grave human cost. theoutlawocean.com/china1

The Crimes Behind the Seafood You Eat: China has invested heavily in an armada of far-flung fishing vessels, in part to extend its global influence. This maritime expansion has come at grave human cost.

theoutlawocean.com/china1
Michael Luo (@michaelluo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Read this incredible, immersive investigation by Ian Urbina, years in the making and demanding the most intrepid of reporting. China has invested in a shadowy armada of far-flung fishing vessels. "The Crimes Behind the Seafood You Eat." newyorker.com/magazine/2023/…

The New Yorker (@newyorker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

.Ian Urbina and a team of investigators spent the past four years visiting ships from China’s distant-water fleet in their largest fishing grounds, reporting on the human and environmental costs of the country’s seafood industry. nyer.cm/m3mAyq4

.<a href="/ian_urbina/">Ian Urbina</a> and a team of investigators spent the past four years visiting ships from China’s distant-water fleet in their largest fishing grounds, reporting on the human and environmental costs of the country’s seafood industry. nyer.cm/m3mAyq4
Ian Urbina (@ian_urbina) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In the past several days since our investigation was published by The New Yorker there has been a lot of follow-up coverage and activity. This thread offers some highlights: 🧵

Peabody Awards (@peabodyawards) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If you’ve been paying attention, journalism is in crisis mode. So If you want to feel good about journalism—awed by meticulous reporting, smart detective work, innovative storytelling, and true bravery—then the 5 interactive media projects highlighted in this #PeabodyFinds

If you’ve been paying attention, journalism is in crisis mode. So If you want to feel good about journalism—awed by meticulous reporting, smart detective work, innovative storytelling, and true bravery—then the 5 interactive media projects highlighted in this #PeabodyFinds
Michael Luo (@michaelluo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On the morning of November 19, 2005, U.S. Marines killed 24 people in Haditha, Iraq. They also recorded the aftermath of their actions. See the photographs, obtained by In the Dark, which the military tried to keep from the public for years. newyorker.com/podcast/in-the…

Madeleine Baran (@madeleinebaran) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In the Dark has obtained photos of the 2005 massacre in Haditha, Iraq — which the U.S. military tried to keep from the public for years newyorker.com/podcast/in-the…

Madeleine Baran (@madeleinebaran) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For months, The New Yorker’s Sam Wolson & David Kofahl have been working alongside us on a different way to examine what happened in Haditha - through first-person statements of Marines & survivors. Their immersive piece is out today, and it’s stunning. newyorker.com/podcast/in-the…

Madeleine Baran (@madeleinebaran) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We also released a short bonus episode of In the Dark today, with me going behind-the-scenes with Sam to talk about the making of this piece. podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/in-…

The New Yorker (@newyorker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

U.S. Marines killed 24 civilians in Haditha, Iraq. No one has been held accountable for the killings. An interactive documentary examines the competing narratives of what happened, based on statements from American service members and surviving Iraqis. nyer.cm/7xRwqYR

Michael Luo (@michaelluo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is the most ambitious @newyorker has ever undertaken. In the Dark combined forces with our interactives team David Kofahl Sam Wolson to explore what actually happened in Haditha. Worth your time. newyorker.com/podcast/in-the…

Clare Malone (@claremalone) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If you've been listening to this season of In The Dark, you should take a look at this companion immersive interactive that walks you through the day of the Hadith massacre (it's not graphic but v. compelling). An incredibly ambitious piece of work. newyorker.com/podcast/in-the…

Madeleine Baran (@madeleinebaran) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Sen. Warren, Sen. Van Hollen, and Rep. Jacobs are demanding answers from the Dept of Defense about the killings in Haditha and the military’s response, in a ten-page letter to the inspector general citing our reporting. link.newyorker.com/view/624f5afb0…