John Charles Hockenberry (born June 4, 1956) is an American journalist and author. Hockenberry has reported from all over the world, reporting on a wide variety of stories in virtually every medium for more than three decades. He has written dozens of magazine and newspaper articles, a play, and two books, including the bestselling memoir Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations of Independence, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the novel A River Out Of Eden. He has written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, Wired, The Columbia Journalism Review, Metropolis, and The Washington Post.
Hockenberry has appeared as a presenter or moderator at many design and idea conferences around the world including the TED conference, the World Science Festival in New York and in Brisbane, the Mayo Clinic's Transform Symposium and the Aspen Comedy Festival. He has been a Distinguished Fellow at the MIT Media Lab and serves on the White House Fellows Committee.
He is a prominent figure in the disability rights movement; Hockenberry sustained a spinal cord injury in a car crash at the age of 19, which left him with paraplegia from the chest down.
In late 2017, Hockenberry was the subject of allegations of harassment, unwanted touching and bullying by several female colleagues.
Video John Hockenberry
Biography
Early life
Hockenberry was born in Dayton, Ohio, and grew up in upstate New York and Michigan. He graduated in 1974 from East Grand Rapids High School in East Grand Rapids, Michigan. In 1976, he was paralyzed while hitchhiking on the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
The driver of the car fell asleep and crashed, killing herself. Hockenberry's spinal cord was damaged, and he remains paralyzed without sensation or voluntary movement from the mid-chest down. At the time he was a mathematics major at the University of Chicago, but after his spinal cord injury, he transferred to the University of Oregon in 1980 and studied harpsichord and piano.
Journalism career
Hockenberry started his career as a volunteer for the National Public Radio affiliate KLCC in Eugene, Oregon. In 1981, he moved to Washington, D.C., where he was a newscaster. From 1989 to 1990 he hosted a two-hour nightly news show called HEAT with John Hockenberry. During his 15 years with NPR, he covered many areas of the world, including an assignment as a Middle East correspondent, reporting on the Persian Gulf War in 1991 and 1992. Beginning in November 1991 he served as the first host of NPR's Talk of the Nation.
After leaving NPR in 1992, Hockenberry also worked for ABC News series Day One from 1993 to 1995, covering the civil war in Somalia and the early days of al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, before joining Dateline NBC as a correspondent in 1996.
In 1995, Hockenberry published his memoir Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs and Declarations of Independence. In 1996 he appeared off-Broadway in his one-man autobiographical play, Spoke Man. From 1996-97 he hosted Edgewise, an eclectic news magazine program that aired on MSNBC.
In 1999, he hosted Hockenberry, a show which aired on MSNBC for 6 months. He reported on the Kosovo War in 1999. His weekly radio commentaries aired on the nationally broadcast public radio program The Infinite Mind from 1998 to 2008. He also served as host on The DNA Files for the series airing in 1998, 2001, and 2007. He began developing The Takeaway in 2007 and hosted the show from its 2008 premiere until August 2017.
Hockenberry has narrated several nonfiction projects on healthcare, including Nova series Survivor M.D.: Hearts & Minds, Who Cares: Chronic Illness in America, Remaking American Medicine. He also narrated the eugenics documentary, War Against the Weak.
He has written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, I.D., Wired, The Columbia Journalism Review, Details, and The Washington Post. He published his first novel, A River Out of Eden, in 2002, and he has written about "The Blogs of War" in Wired magazine. In May 2006, he began writing his own blog, "The Blogenberry".
On April 2, 2008, he hosted the premiere of the series Nanotechnology: The Power of Small, discussing the impact of nanotechnology as concerns the general public.
Hockenberry has appeared as presenter and moderator at numerous design and idea conferences around the nation including the Aspen Design Summit, The TED conference, the World Science Festival, and the Aspen Comedy Festival. He also regularly speaks on media, journalism, and disability issues. He was one of the founding inductees to the Spinal Cord Injury Hall of Fame in 2005.
In a New York Magazine exposé, published December 1, 2017, novelist Suki Kim accused Hockenberry of sexually harassing her and other women he had worked with on The Takeaway.
Media criticism
In 2005 he wrote a scathing review of the Academy Award-winning film Million Dollar Baby called "And the Loser Is..." The review was submitted to a disability website with the title "Million Dollar Bigot" as an exclusive feature. The essay was discussed in news articles globally, and Hockenberry was interviewed about it on FAIR's weekly news show Counterspin. A short documentary film was made, also called Million Dollar Bigot, completed on July 13, 2005, featuring Hockenberry as well as many other disability activists.
Hockenberry wrote in the January 2008 Technology Review magazine that on the Sunday after the September 11 attacks he was pitching stories on the origins of al Qaeda and Islamic fundamentalism. He wrote that then-NBC programming chief Jeff Zucker, who came into a meeting Hockenberry was having with Dateline executive producer David Corvo, said Dateline should instead focus on the firefighters and perhaps ride along with them à la COPS, a Fox reality series. According to Hockenberry, Zucker said "that he had no time for any subtitled interviews with jihadists raging about Palestine." Hockenberry has further claimed that General Electric, NBC's parent company, discouraged him from talking to the Bin Laden family about their estranged family member. Hockenberry says that he asked GE, which does business with the Bin Laden family company, to help him get in contact with them. Instead, a PR executive called Hockenberry's hotel room in Saudi Arabia and read him a statement about how GE didn't see its "valuable business relationship" with the Bin Laden Group as having anything to do with Dateline. In another instance, Hockenberry claimed a story he did about a Weather Underground member would not appear on the Sunday edition of Dateline unless the 1960s family drama American Dreams, which followed Dateline in the schedule at the time, did a show about "protesters or something."
Maps John Hockenberry
Personal life
Hockenberry currently lives in New York City and in Massachusetts with his wife, Alison Craiglow Hockenberry, whom he married in 1995. They have five children, including two sets of twins: Zoe, Olivia, Regan, Zachary, and Ajax.
Sexual harassment allegations
In December 2017, he was accused of sexual harassment by author Suki Kim, who claimed Hockenberry sent her suggestive emails and made unwanted sexual advances. [2] He subsequently resigned from his position at The Takeaway.
Works
- Hockenberry, John (1995). Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs and Declarations of Independence. Hyperion, ISBN 978-0786881628
- Hockenberry, John (2002). A River Out Of Eden. Anchor, ISBN 978-0385721509
- Hockenberry, John (October 23, 2012). Frontline episode Climate of Doubt on climate change denial and the climate change controversy
References
External links
- John Hockenberry on IMDb
- John Hockenberry biography via The Infinite Mind (LCMedia)
- John Hockenberry biography via The DNA Files
- John Hockenberry: SCI Hall of Fame » 2005 Inaugural Inductees
- Spacefacts biography of John Hockenberry
- Million Dollar Bigot - Complete Video
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Booknotes interview with Hockenberry on Moving Violations, July 30, 1995.
- John Hockenberry at TED
Source of the article : Wikipedia