Modesty, honesty, care and time, together with varying doses of obsession and concern, are recurring themes in Megha Rajagopalan's story of how she became a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist investigating human rights issues. Megha talks about what it takes to develop and respect sources, to pursue topics, and to embrace collaboration with people from other professional backgrounds in order to reveal a different narrative.
"You don't want to immediately frame everything you do as an investigation. It may be that you've produced something that uncovers some kind of wrongdoing, but I guess to term it as an investigation from the outset, it's almost like you're predetermining what the final result is going to be."
Pascalinah Kabi - I don't just owe it to my mother
Sajad Rasool - Every journalist has to be an activist
Basma Mostafa - If we just keep telling the truth
Deepak Adhikari - We are in a business of thinking
Hanna Liubakova - You just don't give up
Richard Ngamita - It takes a village to fight bad actors
Alison Killing - No, no, no, no, and then occasionally a yes
Avi Asher-Schapiro - Everyone cheats on their homework
Anthea Lawson - Let's go get those bastards
Saul Pwanson - It's not hoarding if it's organised
Lily - Black and white photos were actually taken in colour
Ankita Anand - Is there a story there that we would love to tell?
Jim Mintz - A radically open approach
Sophia Pickles - What if we swap places?
Crofton Black - How does the world work?
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