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Malachy Browne, enterprise investigations director with the New York Times, is speaking at the Global Economic Summit in Killarney’s Hotel Europe.
The New York Times has just released a visual investigation into the March 23rd attack by the Israeli Defence Forces on a convoy of Palestinian Red Crescent and Gaza civil defence employees. For more on this Malachy Browne, from the Visual Investigations unit of the New York Times.
Malachy Browne, Journalist with the New York Times; Neale Richmond, Minister of State at the Department of Finance; Jennifer Whitmore, Social Democrats TD for Wicklow; Thomas Pringle, Independent TD for Donegal
Malachy Browne heads up the New York Times's visual investigations unit where he and his team investigate key events, from breaking news at home to war atrocities abroad, to piece together second-by-second what really happened.The work exposes the truth of events, particularly ones that are shrouded in misinformation, conspiracy theories and official denials. He and his team have won two Pulitzer Prizes.Investigations, presented on the New York Times website, range from uncovering the devastating sequence of events of the atrocity at Bucha in the early days of the Russian invasion of Ukraine to plotting exactly happened in 2017 when a gunman opened fire at a concert in Las Vegas killing 60 people.On In the News he talks about these projects and more while explaining just how his team works, from 3D modelling and AI to painstakingly exploring satellite images and mining phone records, and how the Limerick man who began his career in Dublin before moving to New York works to stay one step ahead in a media landscape flooded with fake news.Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon. This episode was originally published in May 2024. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Malachy Browne heads up the New York Times's visual investigations unit where he and his team investigate key events, from breaking news at home to war atrocities abroad, to piece together second-by-second what really happened.The work exposes the truth of events, particularly ones that are shrouded in misinformation, conspiracy theories and official denials. He and his team have won two Pulitzer Prizes.Investigations, presented on the New York Times website, range from uncovering the devastating sequence of events of the atrocity at Bucha in the early days of the Russian invasion of Ukraine to plotting exactly happened in 2017 when a gunman opened fire at a concert in Las Vegas killing 60 people.On In the News he talks about these projects and more while explaining just how his team works, from 3D modelling and AI to painstakingly exploring satellite images and mining phone records, and how the Limerick man who began his career in Dublin before moving to New York works to stay one step ahead in a media landscape flooded with fake news.Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
An investigation published by The New York Times analysing clothing and other details show a connection between the four suspects detained by Russia and the men who carried out the Crocus City Hall massacre on Friday night. To tell us more Malachy Browne, co-founder of the Visual Investigations team at The New York Times.
With a computer programming background and an instinct for reporting, Malachy Browne is on the vanguard of a new form of data-driven news coverage that is revitalizing journalism.Co-founder and enterprise director of the New York Times Visual Investigations team, Malachy is pioneering the use of digital sleuthing, collecting and analyzing troves of video and audio, satellite images and other data, and creating 3-D reconstructions of crime scenes and geopolitical events to hold the powerful to account and deconstruct important news events.These efforts have earned two Pulitzer Prizes, an Emmy, and other top-tier accolades for Malachy and his team.Not bad for a Limerick lad from the village of Broadford, population 276!He'd earn his master's in international relations at the University of Limerick after getting his bachelor's degree in engineering at University College Dublin.Malachy tells of navigating between his core computer competency and his journalistic instincts (which he “blames” on his uncle, the legendary journalist Vincent Browne) which would lead him to Storyful, where he'd collaborate with past guests Mark Little, David Clinch, and others in creating the emerging innovative data-driven style of reporting.Join us for an inside look at the way Malachy and his team are telling the world's most critical stories—from the Arab Spring to the January 6th Insurrection—in an entirely new way. Malachy Browne LinksX/TwitterFacebookLinkedInNew York Times LinksVisual InvestigationsMalachy BrowneDay of Rage: How Trump Supporters Took the U.S. Capitol
Malachy Browne, New York Times Visual Investigations Team.
Malachy Browne, New York Times, discusses the leaking of classified US Government military documents.
Malachy Browne, Reporter and producer with the New York Times
“We understood the magnitude of the event fairly early on and the need to start collecting evidence…That's how we think of this. As evidence, not just cover or B-roll.” — New York Times Visual Investigations Lead Malachy Browne on the January 6 Capitol riots. “Day of Rage” is the duPont-Columbia award-winning, New York Times visual investigation of the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol. Co-director Malachy Browne explains what it was like to organize and dissect thousands of hours of footage from “one of the most documented acts of political violence ever.” For more, visit https://bit.ly/OADayofRage
Malachy Browne joins us in the studio to talk about his years of investigative journalism with the New York Times, his talk in UL this evening, and what it's like being back in his home county. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Please join our last Digital Irish event before the summer break on Thursday, June 16th from 6pm at the Irish Consulate, where we are delighted to host a special panel with Glamour's Samantha Barry, Newswhip's Paul Quigley and Malachy Browne from the New York Times, moderated by Conde Nast's Rachel Quigley. The problem of misinformation — and the right approach to it for regulators and social media platforms — is turning into one of the most divisive political issues of the 2020s. Every major news story brings a swarm of counter stories — from covid to the capitol riot, the Ukraine invasion to vaccines. Can measures like the Disinformation Governance Board (suspended after just three weeks) and the Digital Services Act actually foster much-needed transparency? Or will the rising power of deep fake video and niche platforms see us all disappearing into our own “truths”? All this and more will be discussed by our expert panel. Get your tickets: https://digitalirish.com/from-fake-news-to-deep-fakes/ 2017 Event Details: https://digitalirish.com/icymi-the-rise-of-fake-news-leading-irish-professionals-have-their-say/
Mitchell S. Jackson is a journalist and author. His profile of Ahmaud Arbery, ”Twelve Minutes and a Life,” won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing. ”What is 'great'? 'Great' isn't really sales, right? No one cares what James Baldwin sold. So: Are you doing the important work?” Show notes: @MitchSJackson mitchellsjackson.com Jackson on Longform 00:00 "Twelve Minutes and a Life" (Runner's World • Jun 2020) 01:00 Pafko at the Wall (Don DeLillo • Scribner • 2001) 03:00 "Ahmaud Arbery's Final Minutes: What Videos and 911 Calls Show" (Malachy Browne, Drew Jordan, Dmitriy Khavin and Ainara Tiefenthaler • New York Times • May 2020) 12:00 "We Went to Vegas to Wring Joy From Heartbreak" (New York Times Magazine • Sep 2021) 16:00 Survival Math (Scribner • 2020) 24:00 The Residue Years (Bloomsbury • 2014) 29:00 "Chuck Palahniuk, Tom Spanbauer Share Writing Secrets" (Jeff Baker • Oregonian • May 2014) 34:00 "When Michael B. Jordan Promises to Come Home, He Means It" (Esquire • Nov 2019) 36:00 "Chris Rock's Plan for Immortality" (Esquire • May 2021) 44:00 "Prison" (Richard Just, Editor • Washington Post • Oct 2019) 44:00 "Calendars" (Washington Post • Oct 2019) 45:00 Olio (Tyehimba Jess • Wave Books • 2016) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Irish journalist Malachy Browne joins Miriam.
On the podcast this week, Gavan, Richard and Zara discuss the Ukrainian President's address to the Dáil taking a closer look at Volodymyr Zelenskyy's appeal to the Irish Government, what it means, and what's likely to happen next. New York Times' Pulitzer Prize winner Malachy Browne becomes the first official guest to join The Group Chat. He'll be telling the trio about breaking down misinformation in a war zone and the science behind verifying video footage Also on the pod: How one Dublin TD befriended Bella Hadid one of the world's most famous supermodels and if you're heading on holiday this Easter, will Dublin Airport have the security queues under control?The Group Chat is a weekly video and audio offering where Zara, Richard and Gavan will bring viewers and listeners behind the scenes of the week's biggest news stories, with a host of special guests also joining the conversation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This episode of Across The Margin: The Podcast looks back on the distressing events of January 6th, 2021 with an examination of the documentary Day of Rage, a film that culls thousands of hours of videos and audio from rioters and police body cams to tell the story of the Capitol insurrection. The product of a six-month New York Times investigation, Day of Rage provides the most complete picture to date of what happened — and why. To properly delve into this powerful documentary, this episode features an interview the senior producer of the New York Times Visual Investigations team who produced and co-directed Day of Rage, Malachy Browne. Browne was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2020 for international reporting for coverage of Russian culpability in crimes around the world, including the bombing of hospitals in Syria. He has has led investigations into the killing of Breonna Taylor and other Black Americans by police, the Las Vegas mass shooting, chemical weapons attacks in Syria, extra-judicial military shootings in Nigeria, and the killing of a young Palestinian medic along the Gaza-Israel border. In this episode host Michael Shields and Malachy Browne discuss a bevy of the shocking particulars of the January 6th insurrection that were featured in Day of Rage. They converse upon the massive effort in bringing the documentary to life, who exactly the rioters were as exposed in Day of Rage, the evidence present in the film that that the storming of the Capitol was assuredly premeditated, how the Capitol police were let down by their superiors on that fateful day, and so much more. Join in on an episode that pays tribute to a documentary that lays out plainly just how fragile democracy can be. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
DAY OF RAGE chronicles the January 6, 2020 attack on the United States Capitol, arguably the most widely documented act of political violence in history. During a six-month investigation The New York Times obtained analyzed and mapped out thousands of hours of video to provide the most complete account of the Capitol riot to date. DAY OF RAGE charts in chilling detail how the peaceful transition of power was disrupted by rioters who stormed a seemingly impenetrable seat of government. Viewers gain critical insights into the character and motivation of the rioters by experiencing the day through their cellphone videos police body cameras surveillance footage inside the Capitol and the internal radio recordings detailing how the officers responded. Co-producer Malachy Browne (David Botti) joins us to talk about the methodical way in which a large team of reporters, social media experts and investigators, from the New York Times Visual Investigations Unit, pieced together this harrowing and eye-opening account of the attack on the our national Capital and it's intended objective, to sabotage the will of the American people by negating the results of a freely decided election through violence and lend support to the efforts of a major political party's plan of organized sedition. Watch at: youtube.com/Day of Rage The New York Times Visual Investigations site Sign up for The New York Times Visual Investigations newsletter
The film "Day of Rage" culls thousands of hours of videos and audio from protestors and police body cams to tell the story of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection. We speak with Malachy Browne, senior producer of the New York Times Visual Investigations team who produced and co-directed the film. And, a former senior policy adviser for the OSHA, Deborah Berkowitz, makes the case for stronger protections in the workplace for employees of all stripes.
Mitchell S. Jackson is a journalist and author. His profile of Ahmaud Arbery, ”Twelve Minutes and a Life,” won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing. ”What is 'great'? 'Great' isn't really sales, right? No one cares what James Baldwin sold. So: Are you doing the important work?” Show notes: @MitchSJackson mitchellsjackson.com Jackson on Longform 00:00 "Twelve Minutes and a Life" (Runner's World • Jun 2020) 01:00 Pafko at the Wall (Don DeLillo • Scribner • 2001) 03:00 "Ahmaud Arbery's Final Minutes: What Videos and 911 Calls Show" (Malachy Browne, Drew Jordan, Dmitriy Khavin and Ainara Tiefenthaler • New York Times • May 2020) 12:00 "We Went to Vegas to Wring Joy From Heartbreak" (New York Times Magazine • Sep 2021) 16:00 Survival Math (Scribner • 2020) 24:00 The Residue Years (Bloomsbury • 2014) 29:00 "Chuck Palahniuk, Tom Spanbauer Share Writing Secrets" (Jeff Baker • Oregonian • May 2014) 34:00 "When Michael B. Jordan Promises to Come Home, He Means It" (Esquire • Nov 2019) 36:00 "Chris Rock's Plan for Immortality" (Esquire • May 2021) 44:00 "Prison" (Richard Just, Editor • Washington Post • Oct 2019) 44:00 "Calendars" (Washington Post • Oct 2019) 45:00 Olio (Tyehimba Jess • Wave Books • 2016) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Dave chats to Visual Investigator with the New York Times, Malachy Browne about a new film, which provides the most complete picture to date of what happened at the US Capitol riot and why!
Pulitzer Prize winning Malachy Browne from The New York Times visual investigations team talks about the his journey from engineering into journalism, how he and his team pioneered a new form of explanatory and accountability journalism at The Times, the Las Vegas mass shooting, Syrian hospitals being bombed by Russian pilots and the killing of a young Palestinian medic along the Gaza-Israel border.
We have the brilliant novelist Eimear McBride. Writer Gavin McCrea on a lifetime of homophobia, his story is one horribly familiar to all gay men & women of Ireland. The great NY Times journalist, Limerick native Malachy Browne will talk about his forensic video restrictions which have already won him an Emmy. Plus live music from David Geraghty.
Ronan talks to Malachy Browne Senior Story Producer at the New York Times who will be talking at the Social Media Live conference later this week. Malachy talks about his background, working in Storyful, fake news, the Emmy he recently won. Malachy also talks about what he will be talking about at the Social Media Live conference, and what social platforms he uses.
From the Harvard Kennedy School, and the University of Cambridge, this is a special collaborative episode of Justice Matters and Declarations. Do we live in a “post-truth” world? How does information shape national and international politics? Can we fact-check reliably in the social media age, and can we imagine a future where such standards can be enforced online? These are some of the questions we’ll be grappling with in this episode. We were joined by Malachy Browne, a Senior Story Producer at The New York Times. Malachy’s led investigations from Yemen to the refugee camp known as the “Calais” jungle, and he’s a leader in using open-source digital techniques to verify social media stories -- work that gets right to the heart of today’s episode
Listen to the full extract on our latest episode.
Join us for this special episode of Justice Matters, produced in collaboration with Declarations: The Human Rights Podcast. In this episode, we interview Malachy Browne, Senior Story Producer at the New York Times. Malachy focuses on visual and open source investigations. About Malachy Browne: Malachy Browne is a senior story producer with The New York Times. He specializes in social journalism with a focus on international reporting and breaking news. https://www.nytimes.com/by/malachy-browne About Sushma Raman, Executive Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights: https://carrcenter.hks.harvard.edu/people/sushma-raman About Declarations Podcast: A show about human rights coming to you every week from the Cambridge Centre of Governance and Human Rights. Tune in each week as our panel explores the rights and wrongs of contemporary politics, joined by fascinating guests from the University of Cambridge and around the world. This episode features Declaration's Matthew Mahmoudi and Max Curtis. More:@DeclarationsPod, based out of @CGHR_Cambridge, @malachybrowne, @carrcenter
Join us for this special episode of Justice Matters, produced in collaboration with Declarations: The Human Rights Podcast. In this episode, we interview Malachy Browne, Senior Story Producer at the New York Times. Malachy focuses on visual and open source investigations. About Malachy Browne: Malachy Browne is a senior story producer with The New York Times. He specializes in social journalism with a focus on international reporting and breaking news. https://www.nytimes.com/by/malachy-browne About Sushma Raman, Executive Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights: https://carrcenter.hks.harvard.edu/people/sushma-raman About Declarations Podcast: A show about human rights coming to you every week from the Cambridge Centre of Governance and Human Rights. Tune in each week as our panel explores the rights and wrongs of contemporary politics, joined by fascinating guests from the University of Cambridge and around the world. This episode features Declaration's Matthew Mahmoudi and Max Curtis. More:@DeclarationsPod, based out of @CGHR_Cambridge, @malachybrowne, @carrcenter
WIth New York Times' senior story producer Malachy Browne. You can see the whole timeline video here: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/23/insider/reporting-on-las-vegas-pixel-by-pixel.html?rref=collection%2Fbyline%2Fmalachy-browne&action=click&contentCollection=undefined®ion=stream&module=stream_unit&version=latest&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=collection
We're joined by Claire Wardle, Director of Research and Projects at First Draft News, and Malachy Browne, Senior Story Producer with The New York Times, for an in-depth discussion on truth, trust, news and the internet, and why we should all stop using the term "fake news". Hosted by Olivia Rosenman. Fourth Estate is produced by 2SER 107.3 in Sydney and is broadcast across the Community Radio Network in Australia.
The success of Irish start-ups such as Storyful has showcased the wealth of digital media talent this country has to offer. That has clearly been noticed beyond these shores as the stories of Malachy Browne, managing editor and European anchor at Reported.ly - a social media-based news outlet, and Blathnaid Healy, editor of Mashable UK. illustrate.
Malachy Browne (Storyful) and Sinead Van Kampen (PRSlides) talk about new media opportunities at Freelance Forum Spring 2014
Malachy Browne speaks to Brenda about what it was like to be editor of Storyful on the night of the Boston Bombings.