top of page

BIOGRAPHY

reedema-R1-E001 fnl.jpg
JOSH KRON

Joshua Kron is an American writer, journalist and storyteller. He was a correspondent for The New York Times in east Africa, and he has contributed to The Atlantic, PlayboyForeign Policy, The Guardian, and others. A full description can be found. Josh's fiction and creative prose has appeared in MonkeyBicycle,  PindeldybozSubterranean Quarterly and Huffington Post. He has reported for CNN, Associated Press, and has consulted for the United Nations, and the Economist. He was a 2016 Fellow with the Carey Institue for Global Good, studying political security in east Africa. He is a New York Knicks loyalist and lived in Niagara Falls, N.Y.

file0.jpg
September 2011

Anger vented in the Kiseka market in Uganda reflects the frustrations over soaring commodity prices, corruption and waste that are fueling protests inspired by the Arab Spring.

file0.jpg
September 2013-2016

“We haven’t done anything that any other journalists wouldn’t do if they were looking for the truth,” said John Allan Namu, one of the program’s hosts from KTN. “It’s Journalism 101, but they want to paint it as a sustained attack against the military.”

IMG_20190318_214451.jpg
the Falls
February 2020

the Falls is a poltical/crime drama about identity and salvation told by rust-belt dystopia where all of America can be found: and it's lost -- Niagara Falls, N.Y. This is about life in America, and America's life. It all happened here. And it isn't over...

file0.jpg
October 2012

The balance of power between a state and its citizens rests on who controls access to communication and information. Change may be coming again...

file3.jpg
November 2012

Partisan lines that once fell along regional borders can increasingly be found at the county level. What does that mean for the future of the United States? 

file3.jpg
February 2011

After decades of civil war, peace has finally settled in southern Sudan. The south will soon declare independence from the north, and with this newfound freedom, the southern Sudanese are beginning to rediscover themselves, reacquaint themselves with all that has been stunted or twisted or buried under the weight of war. 

bottom of page