John Mecklin (journalist)

John Mecklin is a journalist, novelist and editor, who specializes in narrative journalism. He was the editor-in-chief of Miller-McCune, a national public policy magazine named after its founder, Sara Miller McCune. Mecklin is currently the editor of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

Career

After growing up in the Midwest, Mecklin enrolled at Indiana University, where he graduated with a B.A. in psychology. From January 1984 to June 1992, he worked as an investigative reporter for the Houston Post. He then matriculated at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, graduating in 1993 with a master degree in public administration. Subsequently, he assumed a variety of leadership positions in alternative journalism:

Awards

Mecklin has received numerous honors, among others an Investigative Reporters and Editors award,[2] a John Bartlow Martin Award for Public Interest Magazine Journalism,[3] and an Association of Alternative Newsweeklies award for Investigative Reporting.[4] Under his guidance, journalists of the publications he managed won:

High Stakes Texas Bingo

During his tenure at SF Weekly, Mecklin began working on his roman à clef High Stakes Texas Bingo. In it, Mecklin satirizes Houston politics, as he experienced it during his time at the Houston Post. The novel, which involves semi-fictitious corrupt county judges, shipping magnates, and even vice president George H.W. Bush, focuses on the machinations of Jackie Belfast (real name: Terry O’Rourke), a Democrat and attorney who, after a stint in President Jimmy Carter's White House and a subsequent period in California, returned to Houston to face off with his rival, Bingo Satwell (real name: Harris County Commissioner "Boss" Bob Eckels).

Excerpts from the novel, which has attracted a sizable underground following, are available online.[9]

Personal life

John Mecklin is married to Nina Dunbar. They have two children.

References

  1. http://www.johnmecklin.com/biopage.html>
  2. http://www.ire.org/resourcecenter/contest/past/2001.html
  3. http://www.medill.northwestern.edu/about/sponsoredawards.aspx?id=113091
  4. http://aan.org/alternative/Aan/AwardsView?awardCategory=Investigative%20Reporting&year=2002
  5. Lisa Davis, writing for SF Weekly, won it in 2001. Ray Ring, writing for High Country News, won it in 2006.
  6. High Country News won the award in 2008.
  7. Peter Byrne, writing for SF Weekly, won it in 2004. Lisa Davis, writing for SF Weekly, won it in the same year.
  8. Valerie Brown, writing for Miller-McCune, won it in 2009.
  9. The Texas Observer, August 10, 2007
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