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Biography

At a press conference for Senate candidate Harvey Gantt, 1990. Photo by Sadie Bridger

At a press conference for Senate candidate Harvey Gantt, 1990. Photo by Sadie Bridger.


“He’s taught big-city reporters a thing or two about investigative journalism.”
        –Atlanta Journal and Constitution

Barry Yeoman specializes in in-depth reporting that puts a human face on complex issues. During nearly four decades in journalism, he has brought readers and listeners into:

  • a training ground for private soldiers on secret missions;
  • a lab where the basic assumptions of dinosaur science are being challenged;
  • an Indian coastline where a World Bank-financed coal plant threatens traditional fishing families;
  • back-of-town blues joints in New Orleans that struggle to keep their doors open;
  • a seminary where Christian missionaries train to convert Muslims;
  • a New England town threatening secession from the United States;
  • a Turkish bird paradise that could soon be under water;
  • a real-life Rick’s Café in Casablanca;
  • a boat operated by two shrimpers coping with the BP oil spill;
  • the Washington corridors where a super-lobbyist rose to power before his fall; and
  • the inside of his own DNA.

He has written about Southern chicken farmers, brain-injured athletes, women veterans, tribal elders, earnest Promise Keepers, civil-rights heroes, an American strategist for the Iraqi resistance, controversial sex researchers, dog rescuers, Spanish Carnival musicians, Jews for Jesus, anti-fracking rebels, and the women whose lives are caught up in the debate over “partial birth” abortion.

Covering the events of Oct. 31, 2020, when law-enforcement officers in Graham, North Carolina pepper-sprayed voters marching to the polls. Photo by Devin Lee Vaughn.


Barry’s work has appeared AARP The Magazine, The American Prospect, The Assembly, Audubon, CityLab, Discover, Glamour, Good Housekeeping, The Guardian, Harvard Public Health, HuffPost, Mother Jones, The Nation, National Wildlife, New Republic, O Magazine, onEarth, Parade, Popular Science, Saturday Evening Post, Sierra, Sunset, Talking Points Memo, Texas Monthly, and The Washington Post. It has been published by journalism non-profits like the International Consortium of Investigative Reporters, Type Investigations, and the Food & Environment Reporting Network. It has been translated into Russian, Portuguese, Khmer, Spanish, Flemish, and Italian.

Barry won the National Magazine Award for Public Interest, the industry’s highest honor, as part of a team that investigated the Southern poultry industry. He won the Green Eyeshade Award, the South’s top journalism prize, for an exposé of North Carolina’s highway-building system. Columbia Journalism Review, the nation’s premiere journalism magazine, named him one of nine investigative reporters who are “out of the spotlight but on the mark.” The Columbia University School of Journalism and Poynter Institute have described Barry’s work as “the essence of excellence.” For a list of awards, see the righthand column of this page.

Interviewing U.S. Rep. Mel Watt at 1992 Democratic National Convention. Photo by Jenny Warburg.

He has produced radio documentaries and podcasts about everything from zydeco music to coastal land loss. He served as the editorial producer for the four-year run of Life Reimagined, a TV segment that aired on the TODAY show and was hosted by Jane Pauley.

Besides doing his own journalism, Barry teaches journalism at Wake Forest University and Duke University.

Click here for Barry’s resume. Click here to read Allison Kirkland’s 2019 interview with Barry, reposted by Harvard’s Nieman Storyboard. Click here to subscribe to Barry’s occasional newsletter.

Photo by Jared Lazarus, Duke Photography.

For this article, Barry tested his own DNA and that of his dog Scooter (2007-2018). Photo by Jared Lazarus, Duke Photography.

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Selected Awards

Selected Awards

Honored by Columbia Journalism Review as one of “the best unsung investigative journalists working in print in the United States.”

Winner, National Magazine Award for Public Interest for his role in an investigation of the poultry industry in Southern Exposure.

Winner, the Batten Medal for individual achievement in public-service journalism.

Winner, Arlene Eisenberg Award for Writing that Makes a Difference (American Society of Journalists and Authors) for an article in Good Housekeeping about for-profit career colleges.

Winner, Al Neuharth Innovation in Investigative Journalism Award (Online News Association), Whitman Bassow Award (Overseas Press Club), Gold Keyboard Award (New York Press Club), and National Headliner Award for his role in an series by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists on World Bank abuses.

Winner, Genesis Award (Humane Society of the United States) for an article in O, The Oprah Magazine about the rescue of more than 300 hoarded dogs.

Winner, Gracie Award for Outstanding Mid-Length Radio Documentary for an AARP Prime Time Radio special about the parents of seriously injured veterans.

Winner, Eddie Award (Folio Magazine) for a Woman’s Day profile of the mother of a transgender son.

Winner, CINE Golden Eagle for his role in the NBC Today Show segment Your Life Calling about midlife reinvention.

Honored by Project Censored (four times) for articles in Southern Exposure about the poultry industry and for-profit career colleges, and in Mother Jones about stealth anti-abortion efforts and private military contractors.

Winner, Washington Monthly Journalism Award (twice) for articles in Mother Jones about stealth anti-abortion efforts and IndyWeek about the politics of highway construction.

Winner, Poynter Institute Model of Excellence Award for his diversity efforts at IndyWeek.

Winner, Association of Alternative Newsweeklies Award (twice) for articles in IndyWeek about anti-environmental lobbying and controversial public art.

Winner, National Mature Media Award (seven times) for various articles in AARP The Magazine.

Winner, Sidney Hillman Prize Award for his article in Southern Exposure about for-profit career colleges.

Winner, John Hancock Award for Excellence for his article in Southern Exposure about for-profit career colleges.

Winner, Green Eyeshade Award (Society of Professional Journalists) for his five-part investigation in IndyWeek about campaign contributions and highway construction in North Carolina.

Winner, John Bartlow Martin Award(Northwestern University) for the same highway series.

Winner, Education Writers Association Award for writing about inequities in public-school funding in IndyWeek.

Copyright 2024 Barry Yeoman | Photo by Efthimios Kalos | Site by Sumy Designs, LLC