About

I am currently a reporter at Korea JoongAng Daily, an English-language newspaper based in Seoul, where I cover sports — everything from gaming to international golf. Before moving to South Korea, I spent a year in Washington, D.C. where I covered U.S. politics for The Guardian, business for NPR and international politics for Foreign Policy. I graduated from Northwestern University with a B.S. in Journalism in June 2022. I double-majored in Political Science and hold a Certificate in Integrated Marketing Communications.

For The Guardian, I helped cover everything happening in the White House and on Capitol Hill while following the criminal indictments against Donald Trump and Hunter Biden. I also wrote about abortion rights and the 2024 U.S. election with a focus on the GOP. At NPR, I covered the high-profile defamation suit against Fox News by Dominion Voting Systems for airing baseless claims about its voting machines following the 2020 presidential election. I also helped cover Elon Musk’s Twitter acquisition and its aftermath. And I built a mini beat on construction workers and the trades. At Foreign Policy, I helped cover the beginning of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and wrote about pressing issues in several global regions, including climate change in Asia, efforts to boot the British monarchy in the Caribbean and violence in post-coup Myanmar.

Before graduating from Northwestern, I spent three months reporting from Capitol Hill as part of an undergraduate political journalism program where I also covered Virginia’s 2021 governor’s race and contributed to The Washington Post’s election day live blog. I was also a newsletter editor at The Yappie, a publication covering Asian American and Pacific Islander politics, where I headed two weekly email newsletters along with the editor-in-chief. My first full-time journalism gig was at Inc. Magazine, where I wrote about small businesses and entrepreneurs.