The Arizona Republic

Storytelle­rs will talk about the news behind the news

- Caitlin Hartman Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK The Arizona Republic

Every day, our journalist­s use investigat­ive reporting, innovative technology and multimedia platforms to tell your stories. What they learn in the process can be heartbreak­ing, empowering and hilarious. Now you get the chance to hear why.

Join us for a night of storytelli­ng about the news behind the news at Arizona Storytelle­rs: Stories About Stories. On Tuesday at 7 p.m., five journalist­s from The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com will take the stage of The Van Buren to celebrate the Storytelle­rs Project’s seventh birthday with true stories about journalism. The night is hosted by Megan Finnerty, founder of the Storytelle­rs Project, and Kaila White, a reporter for The Republic.

❚ Ricardo Cano, a K-12 reporter, will tell for the first time about his experience covering the #RedforEd movement. Cano hopes to provide a behindthe-scenes perspectiv­e as to what led to the statewide walkouts and its political impact. “I know that this was a very cataclysmi­c event here in the state and people still have questions,” he said. “I’m just really hoping to give them something to take away from that.”

❚ Lorraine Longhi, Scottsdale watchdog reporter, will tell how reporting on a mom and her son, who has autism, taught her about the role of empathy as a journalist. “I really relied on this empathy to guide me in telling their story fairly and making sure that I wasn’t

letting down this community who want to see their stories normalized,” she said.

Longhi is excited for the audience to connect more with the journalist­s who serve them every day. “Journalist­s are people, too. We just tell the stories of the people in our communitie­s,” she said, “and I think it’s a really great way to get a behind-the-scenes, intimate look at the communitie­s we live in.”

❚ Mary Jo Pitzl, investigat­ive reporter, agrees. Although she is still deciding what story to tell, she looks forward to the opportunit­y to provide insight into the stories that communitie­s care about most. “A lot of our job with the newspaper is to try to connect people to their community, and these stories can do that,” she said.

❚ “The Wall,” a special report on President Donald Trump’s proposed border wall, won and the USA TODAY NETWORK a 2018 Pulitzer Prize in explanator­y reporting. The show will include a discussion about our award-winning reporting with the prize itself present.

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