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Tom Junod
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Tom Junod (born April 9, 1958) is an American journalist who is currently a senior writer for ESPN.com.[1] He is the recipient of two National Magazine Awards from the American Society of Magazine Editors.[2]
Key Information
Early life
[edit]In 1980, Junod graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the State University of New York at Albany.[3]
Career
[edit]Junod worked as a writer for Esquire magazine beginning in 1997, after following editor David Granger to the magazine from GQ. He also worked for Atlanta magazine, Life, and Sports Illustrated. Junod has published award-winning pieces for several magazines. Among his notable works are The Abortionist, The Rapist Says He's Sorry,[4] The Falling Man[5] and a controversial 2001 piece on R.E.M. lead singer Michael Stipe, in which he satirically fabricated information for an interview that never happened.[6] As of November 2019, he is a writer for ESPN.com. In 2022, Junod and Paula Lavigne published a story that uncovered the crimes of Penn State football player Todd Hodne in the 1970s.[7]
Junod is also noted for his Esquire profile of Fred Rogers.[8] Junod has stated that his encounter with Rogers changed his perspective on life.[9] The event is the premise of the 2019 feature film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood. Junod also appeared in the critically acclaimed 2018 documentary Won't You Be My Neighbor?.[10]
Among his controversial articles, Junod came to regret the tone of his 1997 profile of Kevin Spacey for Esquire that "more or less outed the actor". At the time Spacey described the profile as "mean-spirited" and "homophobic" and called for a boycott of both the author and publication. "That story had the reek of bad faith to it, to be quite honest with you," Junod admitted when interviewed by Atlanta Magazine in 2019, noting that the negative response to his Kevin Spacey profile had stalled his career prior to his 1998 Fred Rogers assignment.[9]
Awards
[edit]Junod is the recipient of two National Magazine Awards from the American Society of Magazine Editors; one for a profile of John Britton, an abortion doctor,[11] and one for a profile of a rapist undergoing therapy while enduring what is known as "civil commitment." Two other pieces by him were finalists for the same award.[12]
In 2011, Junod won the James Beard Award for his essay "My Mom Couldn't Cook", published in Esquire in September 2010.[13]
References
[edit]- ^ "Tom Junod". ESPN Press Room. Retrieved November 24, 2025.
- ^ Carlson, Peter (June 26, 2007). "Bringing Out the Worst In Celebrity Coverage?". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 30, 2010.
- ^ Shepherd, Steven L. (2001). Our fathers: reflections by sons. Beacon Press. p. 248. ISBN 0-8070-6246-4.
- ^ Junod, Tom (December 1995). "The Rapist Says He's Sorry". GQ. Archived from the original on September 5, 2010. Retrieved November 10, 2019.
- ^ Junod, Tom (2003). "The Falling Man". Esquire.
- ^ "Writer Comes Clean On Fake Stipe Profile". Billboard. May 25, 2001. Retrieved March 3, 2012.
- ^ Junod, Tom; Lavigne, Paula (April 11, 2022). "Untold: Before Jerry Sandusky, Penn State football had another serial sexual predator". ESPN.com. Retrieved November 24, 2025.
- ^ Junod, Tom (April 6, 2017). "Can You Say...Hero?". esquire.com. Esquire Magazine. Archived from the original on April 2, 2021. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
- ^ a b Van Atten, Suzanne (November 18, 2019). "How Mister Rogers changed the life of Atlanta writer Tom Junod". AtlantaMagazine.com. Atlanta Magazine. Archived from the original on November 19, 2019. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "Mr. Rogers doc 'Wont You Be My Neighbor?' feels right for our less-than-neighborly times". CNN. June 8, 2018.
- ^ Junod, Tom (February 1994). "The Abortionist". GQ.
- ^ Fennell, John (2009). "The Missouri Association of Publications 5th Anniversary Publishing Summit Will Be Held March 5 and 6 in Columbia". University of Missouri Journalism School. Archived from the original on May 10, 2010.
- ^ Junod, Tom (2010). "My Mom Couldn't Cook". Esquire.
External links
[edit]Tom Junod
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Childhood and Upbringing
Tom Junod was born on April 9, 1958, in Wantagh, New York.[7] He grew up in Wantagh, a community in Nassau County on Long Island.[2] [3] Junod's father worked as a traveling salesman specializing in women's purses, which involved frequent travel and shaped family dynamics.[2] Junod later described his father as an overpowering figure—seductive yet terrifying—who elicited tears in childhood but laughter in adulthood.[8] The family experienced typical suburban challenges, including limited culinary skills from his mother, whom Junod recalled as unable to cook effectively, influencing his own later role as the family cook.[9] He attended Catholic schools for twelve years, providing a religious foundation amid his upbringing.[10]Formal Education and Early Influences
Junod attended the University at Albany, State University of New York (SUNY), where he majored in English.[1] [11] He enrolled around 1978 and graduated in 1980 with a Bachelor of Arts degree, earning magna cum laude honors.[1] [12] During his undergraduate studies, Junod took a fiction writing course taught by Eugene Mirabelli, an English professor emeritus at UAlbany, who recognized his raw talent and actively encouraged his development as a writer.[1] This mentorship contributed to Junod's early confidence in literary pursuits, as Mirabelli praised his potential despite Junod's self-described unconventional path.[1] Junod also published several essays in the university's literary magazine, experiences that equipped him with initial publications upon graduation and oriented him toward professional writing in New York City.[1] These academic engagements fostered Junod's foundational skills in narrative and prose, influencing his transition from literary aspirations to journalism, though he initially sought to establish himself as a fiction writer rather than a reporter.[1] No formal postgraduate education is documented in available records, marking his bachelor's as the extent of his structured academic training.[1]Journalistic Career
Entry into Journalism
After graduating from the State University of New York at Albany in 1980 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English, magna cum laude, Tom Junod faced initial rejections for editorial positions in New York City while pursuing writing inspired by New Journalism practitioners such as Joan Didion, Truman Capote, Tom Wolfe, and Gay Talese.[2][1] To support himself, he took a job as a traveling handbag salesman, covering territories including Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma, during which he endured a traumatic armed robbery in a Los Angeles hotel room that prompted him to begin writing nonfiction accounts of his experiences.[8][2] Junod's first paid writing work came in the early 1980s in Atlanta, where he produced 50 short profiles for $50 total for a newspaper affiliated with an insurance company operating on a pyramid scheme structure.[1] He followed this with freelance tasks such as rewriting translated books and contributing to a low-tier trade magazine, gradually building toward more substantive opportunities like profiles for Atlanta Magazine.[13] In 1987, Junod secured his entry into professional journalism as a staff writer for Atlanta Magazine, marking a transition from sporadic freelance gigs to consistent magazine work that later extended to outlets including Sports Illustrated, Life, and GQ.[14] This role represented his breakthrough after years of financial instability and self-doubt about sustaining a writing career.[1]Magazine Writing at Esquire
Tom Junod began contributing to Esquire in 1997 and served as a writer at large for nearly two decades, producing a range of long-form profiles, essays, and investigative pieces until approximately 2016.[15] His work emphasized immersive reporting combined with introspective narrative, often probing the complexities of public figures and societal issues through a lens of personal confrontation.[10] Early in his tenure, Junod's 1997 profile of actor Kevin Spacey exemplified his approach to celebrity journalism, delving into the performer's duality with unsparing detail and earning notice for its intensity.[6] In November 1998, he published "Can You Say... Hero?", a profile of Fred Rogers assigned by his editor, which chronicled Rogers' authentic empathy and its transformative effect on Junod himself, diverging from his typical skeptical tone.[10] Junod's post-9/11 coverage included the September 2003 piece "The Falling Man," which analyzed a photograph of an unidentified victim plummeting from the World Trade Center, confronting the reluctance to depict the attacks' visceral human toll.[16] Later contributions addressed political topics, such as his August 2012 essay on President Barack Obama's drone strike program, which scrutinized the expansion of executive authority in counterterrorism and its moral implications based on interviews with administration officials and critics.[17] These articles, among dozens others, solidified Junod's status for blending rigorous fact-gathering with candid reflection, often challenging prevailing narratives.[3]
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