At the age of 19, in 2004, Evangelista first came to national attention when she became the first Filipino to win the London-based annual International Public Speaking Championships - an annual competition sponsored by the
English-Speaking Union held in
London. Her speech entitled
Blonde and Blue Eyes for the theme Borderless World, bested 59 contestants from 37 countries.
Early career She was first published as a youth columnist by
The Philippine Star, and then went on to write a weekly column for the
Philippine Daily Inquirer's opinion section that ran for nine years. She has written for
Rogue magazine and UNO. Evangelista had her start in television journalism as a production assistant for
ABS-CBN News Channel (ANC). She went on to produce a number of programs and documentaries, including the groundbreaking narrative series, Storyline that ran over the ABS-CBN News Channel for five years. She also wrote and produced the short film series AmBisyon and Kinse. She was the executive producer behind ANC's Truths, a three-part investigative documentary on abortion, disaster, and human rights. She is a fellow of the South East Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA), is a Titus Brandsma Awardee for Emergent Journalism and was part of Devex's 2012 40 under 40. She is the co-founder of Storyline Productions with filmmaker
Paolo Villaluna. Her various television projects have been recipients of a number of local awards including the Gawad Tanglaw, the Catholic Mass Media Award, as well as three New York Festivals medals. Evangelista's short film on the aftermath of
Supertyphoon Haiyan won the media prize at the Ministerial Conference for Disaster Risk Reduction in Thailand in 2014. She was also awarded the 2014 Kate Webb Prize for frontline journalism. She is a field reporter for Rappler, producing documentary and news pieces as well as analysis for the Thought Leaders section. As a writer-at-large for
Esquire magazine since its inception, Evangelista writes long-form journalism pieces and profiles politicians and newsmakers.
Some People Need Killing: A Memoir of Murder in My Country In October 2023, Evangelista published a memoir,
Some People Need Killing, about her time reporting on the
drug war by former president
Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines.
David Remnick called it a "journalistic masterpiece" in
The New Yorker. The book was included on
Time's The 100 Must Read Books of 2023 list, as well as
The New York Times 10 Best Books of 2023 list. It was also longlisted for the 2024
Women's Prize for Non-Fiction, and won the 2024
Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism. == Bibliography ==