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Maria ressa
Maria ressa











maria ressa
  1. #MARIA RESSA FULL#
  2. #MARIA RESSA SERIES#
maria ressa

She was included in Time 's Person of the Year 2018 issue featuring a collection of journalists from around the world actively combating fake news. Ressa was born in Manila and raised in Toms River, New Jersey. She previously spent nearly two decades working as a lead investigative reporter in Southeast Asia for CNN. She is the co-founder and CEO of Rappler. Maria Angelita Ressa ( Tagalog pronunciation: born Maria Angelita Delfin Aycardo on October 2, 1963) is a Filipino and American journalist. UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize (2021).Ka Pepe Diokno Human Rights Award (2019).You conquer it.”įor more from Ressa, listen to a conversation between Ressa, Diaz and Aronson-Rath recorded for The FRONTLINE Dispatch podcast days before the Nobel ceremony. 29 conversation with Raney Aronson-Rath, FRONTLINE’s executive producer, and Kathy Pham, a senior fellow and adjunct lecturer at Harvard Kennedy School, held at Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy. “Fear is real, of course, but like a muscle, you get used to it,” Ressa said in a Nov. Since the documentary’s release, Rappler has continued reporting on President Duterte’s drug war, and Ressa remains determined to press on. broadcast premiere with FRONTLINE in January 2021, offers a powerful look at the implications for democracy when press freedom is threatened and disinformation flourishes on social media. The documentary, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2020 and had its U.S.

#MARIA RESSA FULL#

After Philippine distributors and TV broadcasters opted not to license the film, FRONTLINE secured full streaming rights in the country so A Thousand Cuts would be available to the Philippine public via FRONTLINE’s platforms. The government of the Philippines tried to prevent Ressa from attending the Nobel ceremony, according to The New York Times and Rappler, but an appeals court granted permission.įor a closer look at Ressa’s story and her work in the Philippines, stream A Thousand Cuts in FRONTLINE’s online collection of streaming documentaries, in the PBS Video App, on FRONTLINE’s YouTube channel and embedded above. Ressa and Muratov were chosen “for their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression, which is a precondition for democracy and lasting peace,” according to the Nobel announcement. 10, 2021, at a ceremony that will feature lectures from both recipients. We will hold the line.”Īlong with the Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov, Ressa is scheduled to receive the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway, on Dec. “When you have enough of these cuts, you are so weakened that you will die.” But Ressa vowed she and Rappler would carry on in the face of online harassment and numerous court actions: “We will not duck we will not hide. “What we’re seeing is death by a thousand cuts of our democracy,” Ressa said in the documentary, which follows her and Rappler‘s efforts to uphold press freedom in the Philippines. The Philippine president has said journalists “are not exempted from assassination.”

#MARIA RESSA SERIES#

Ressa, who also published a series of stories examining the rapid-fire spread of pro-Duterte disinformation, soon became the focus of online threats, as well as a prime target in Duterte’s crackdown on the news media.

maria ressa

Ressa and her staff at the independent news site Rappler drew the attention of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte when, in the months after his 2016 election, they investigated a slew of killings believed to be connected to Duterte’s bloody war on suspected drug dealers and users. Diaz that made its FRONTLINE premiere in January 2021. Before the October 2021 announcement that she would receive the Nobel Peace Prize, veteran Philippine journalist Maria Ressa was the subject of A Thousand Cuts, a feature-length documentary directed by Ramona S.













Maria ressa