U.S. consumers likely paid more for grills to cook their Independence Day hot dogs and burgers this year because of the U.S.-China trade war, but they will find some consolation in less costly meat for cookouts as tariffs curb U.S. exports.
Award-winning journalist with breaking news experience and prize-awarded photography. Currently Equities Reporter at Bloomberg News, Stockholm.
Previously at Reuters in Brussels and Washington D.C., Svenska Dagbladet and Swedish Public Radio (Sveriges Radio).
Recepient of the 2019 Overseas Press Club Scholar Award, Reuters Fellow and Foreign Press Association Awardee. Top-of-class MS (Honors) graduate from Columbia Journalism School.
All in In English
U.S. consumers likely paid more for grills to cook their Independence Day hot dogs and burgers this year because of the U.S.-China trade war, but they will find some consolation in less costly meat for cookouts as tariffs curb U.S. exports.
This is the story of the hopelessness small rural towns feel in the face of seemingly insurmountable challenges, both social and financial, told through the lens of this tragic accident in the eyes of me as both an outsider and insider; I have been back to my American home town several times, each time realizing it has lost even more of what it once had.
Residents of a Salvation Army-owned senior residency on the Upper West Side feel continuously betrayed and lied to after being forced to move across town to East Harlem this summer after the building they live in was sold to a luxury developer for $108 million.
Protestors gathered outside New York City Hall to protest the lavish deal Amazon has been given to establish their second headquarters in Long Island City - over $3 billion in tax breaks. City Comptroller Scott Stringer accused the Mayor of backdoor deals with the richest man in the world. Assignment for Columiba Journalism School.
For an assignment at Columbia Journalism School, I investigated a rise in shoplifting in Harlem, especially in Central Harlem along West 125th Street. Implementation of graphics from After Effects.
River and ocean swimmers went for the season's final swim down the Hudson. I swam with them, plowing a mile downriver to the George Washington Bridge, then back.
Persuading women to use Truvada, a daily anti-HIV pill, will be central in stopping a recent uptick in infections among women, public health experts say.
Over 45,000 voted in a primary that swept State Sen. Marisol Alcantara from her seat in Inwood and Washington Heights, taken by challenger Robert Jackson.
The Corner Project, which supports drug users in Washington Heights, has been evicted and must rely on vans.
A brief election-night analysis of the Swedish election, which left the two main political blocs tied for power with the populist Sweden Democrats with a record-high support.
For Mittmedia and Hela Hälsingland and several associated print publications, I reported several times from large forest fires in central and northern Sweden. They were sparked by a lighting strike and raged for over a month and were made worse by extreme drought in the region. I reported with my camera, notebook and as a live video broadcaster.
Jonas Ekblom reflects on power dynamics in bed: Sex might be all about power, but that is only because we make it all about gender. And gender and gender differences, today still, are all about power.
A major gravel producer is looking to break a whole new quarry close to the towns of Hudiksvall and Sörforsa. Local residents are sceptical.
Since 1932, family-owned Graveleijs Senap has produced food products and condiments in Hudiksvall. The company, whose iconic mustard jars in glass is a must for many during the Holidays, is being bought by Scandinavian food conglomerate Kavli. They are also closing their Hudiksvall factory and will move all production to Eslöv.
The hundred-year-old mineral findings around the town of Bricka continue to raise interest among prospectors. We can now reveal that an Australian mineral exploration company, Pursuit Minerals, has applied for permits to prospect thousands of acres in the area. All the while, local activists try to get a complete moratorium on mining in the region.
Reported extensively over several weeks from the catastrophic spring floodings that struck several regions in northern and central Sweden, causing the Swedish national emergency agency to send in extra resources. Much of the reporting was done in rubber boots, reporting from flooded yards and houses; collapsing bridges and overflowing fields.
Deeply impressed by Mary Beard’s great book, Jonas Ekblom reflects on women representation in the EU and the need to re-evaluate our understanding of power.