The chapter highlights the profound impact of a book on individuals who regret supporting an autocratic regime in the Philippines, as well as those quietly resisting it. The speaker reflects on their personal growth, evolving from a hopeful youth to a seasoned journalist dedicated to sharing difficult stories and honoring those behind them.
Patricia Evangelista is a trauma journalist whose coverage of the drug war in the Philippines has appeared in Rappler, Esquire, and elsewhere. Her recent book is Some People Need Killing: A Memoir of Murder in My Country.
“It is hard to describe the beat I do without saying very often it involves people who have died. And it seemed like an unfair way to frame it. It didn't quite seem right. … Sometimes there's no dead body, or sometimes there's 6,000, but the function is the same: that the people you speak to have gone through enormous painful trauma, and then there's a way to cover it that minimizes that trauma. So … I don't cover the dead. I cover trauma.”
Show notes:
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