Paul Pringle is a Los Angeles Times reporter who specializes in investigating corruption. In 2019, he and two colleagues won the Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Reporting for their work uncovering the widespread sexual abuse by Dr. George Tyndall at the University of Southern California, an inquiry that grew out of their reporting the year before on Dr. Carmen Puliafito, dean of USC's medical school. Pringle was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2009 and a member of reporting teams that won Pulitzer Prizes in 2004 and 2011. Pringle won the George Polk Award in 2008, the same year the Society of Professional Journalists of Greater Los Angeles honored him as a distinguished journalist. Along with several colleagues, he shared in Harvard University's 2011 Worth Bingham Prize for Investigative Reporting. Pringle and a Times colleague won the California Newspaper Publishers Association's Freedom of Information Award in 2014 and the University of Florida's Joseph L. Brechner Freedom of Information Award in 2015. Pringle lives in Glendale, California.
*A New York Times Editors' Choice and "Best Book of July"*
*A Newsweek Best Book of 2022*
"Just as there is reliably a song of the summer or a must-see
blockbuster, the journalism industry now has a top candidate for
the media controversy of the season ... Pringle's fast-paced book
is a master class in investigative journalism... When institutions
collude to protect one another, reporting may be our last best hope
for accountability."
--The New York Times "Paul Pringle's Bad City is an
earth-shattering tale of appalling institutional corruption--and
the inspiring reporters who overcame shocking obstacles to bring
the truth to light."
--Robert Kolker, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Hidden
Valley Road and Lost Girls "Pringle...reveals how power works in
Los Angeles, a city where a new brand of film-noir corruption
thrives in our tech-economy landscape. It's a city where the
privileged do everything they can to protect their friends and
allies, and where small groups of insurgents work tirelessly to
drag their behavior out into the light of day.... A powerful and
truly original addition to the genre of investigative-journalism
drama."
--The Los Angeles Times "His book details the breathtaking twists
involved in reporting out these many stories, but also lays bare
the cover-ups and scandals present at his own newspaper...not
unlike the NBC News debacle that Ronan Farrow revealed in his book
Catch and Kill."
--The Hollywood Reporter "Bad City, a startling tale of people
looking the other way and behaving ever so badly, never lets up. It
is one whopper of a true-crime story, written with an immediacy
bound to win readers."
--The New York Journal of Books "A Los Angeles noir caper come to
life, Bad City grabs you from the very first sentence and doesn't
let go. A remarkable reporting achievement."
--Chris Hayes, host of All In with Chris Hayes and New York Times
bestselling author of A Colony in a Nation "A crisp tale of
institutional rot, dogged journalism, and heroic whistleblowing.
Readers will be on the edge of their seats."
--Publishers Weekly "The tip that initially made its way to The Los
Angeles Times newsroom was as salacious as it gets... [Bad City]
revisits the paper's relentless reporting that followed, which
uncovered an explosive scandal involving sex abuse and powerful men
preying on the disadvantaged. If the book were just about that, it
would already be compelling enough for news junkies who appreciate
how the sausage gets made. Pringle's book, though, adds newsroom
acrimony as a layer on top of that story"
--Forbes "The salacious tale of a major university mired in
scandal...[and] the newsroom drama is as juicy as the dramas at the
university... A brisk chronicle of sex, lies, and betrayal."
--Kirkus Reviews "This tale of flagrant menace and endemic
corruption is the subject of Pringle's dazzling, irresistible new
book, Bad City. In it, he has produced that rare and treasured gift
for the nonfiction reader: a penetrating investigation that is also
a genuine page-turner."
--Air Mail
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