• In "Mississippi Goddam", a 2021 serial podcast, CIR found new details that shed doubt on the investigation into the 2008 death of a Black teenage football star, Billey Joe Johnson Jr. The podcast was included in
Rolling Stone's "The 10 Best Crime Podcasts of 2021" and Spotify's "Best Episodes of 2021". • For "The Disappeared", a 2020 investigation into migrant children kept in long-term custody by the U.S. government, Reveal sued the federal government to find evidence that the government held refugee children in custody for far longer than was previously known, including one girl who was held for more than six years even though her family was ready to take her in. All told, Reveal found, the government held nearly 1,000 migrant children for longer than one year since fall 2014. This investigation won the IRE FOI Award and the Hillman Prize for Web Journalism. • In "American Rehab", a 2020 serial podcast, Reveal showed how U.S. drug rehabilitation facilities built their business model on using unpaid labor from their participants. The investigation led to federal and class-action lawsuits and a Government Accountability Office investigation, and won an IRE Award, an Edward R. Murrow Award, and a Gerald Loeb Award. • The tell-tale hearts (2020) exposed how unborn babies' hearts are at risk from the use of
trichloroethylene (TCE). The investigation exposed how the Trump administration bowed to chemical companies' 20-year efforts to discredit the solid science linking the dangerous chemical to fetal heart defects. As a result of CIR's reporting, the EPA's Science Advisory Committee on Chemicals called for an investigation, and New York passed a bill banning TCE. • "Behind the Smiles" is a multi-part investigation, ongoing since 2019, into the consequences of
Amazon's relentless drive for domination. It uncovered Amazon's workplace safety crisis and how the company profoundly misled the public, press and lawmakers about it. The reporting has also shown how the company failed to protect user and business data, resulting in serious data security incidents that affected customers and small businesses. The investigation won the IRE Award in Radio/Audio, the Society of American Business Editors and Writers Best in Business Award, and a Gerald Loeb Award for business journalism. It was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting. • In 2018, Reveal's "Kept Out" investigation uncovered how modern-day redlining continues to exist in communities across the country. Based on an analysis of 31 million mortgage loan records, the reporters found evidence that banks continued to discriminate against Latino and African American homeowners across the country. The investigation won the duPont Award, the Selden Ring Award for Investigative Reporting, the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Public Service in TV Journalism, the Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Social Media, and a George Peabody Award. It was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting. • "The Office of Missing Children" (2018) is an acclaimed animated video that provided the unique perspective of a child and mother who were forcibly separated under President Donald Trump's “zero tolerance” policy. Built on Reveal's immigration reporting, the video is a Vimeo staff pick and won the Animayo International Film Festival Social Awareness Award, the Edward R. Murrow Award for Feature Reporting, and the National Headliner Award for Online Video. • "
Heroin(e)" is a 2017 Netflix documentary that follows three women working to break the cycle of drug abuse in Huntington, West Virginia, where the overdose rate is 10 times the national average. The film was nominated for an Academy Award in the category of Best Documentary Short Subject. • "Rape on the Night Shift" (2015), a joint investigation by Reveal, Frontline, Univision, the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and KQED, uncovered the sexual abuse of immigrant women who "clean the malls where you shop, banks where you do business, and offices where you work." The documentary won the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Online Investigative Reporting, the IRE Award for Broadcast/Video, and the Society of Professional Journalists Northern California Chapter award for Investigative Reporting in TV/video. • "The Dark Side of the Strawberry" is a 2014 series that used data, government documents, and community engagement to expose the dangerous pesticides required to grow strawberries to meet market demand. The investigation was awarded the Al Neuharth Innovation in Investigative Journalism award from the Online News Association. • In "The Man Who Killed Osama Bin Laden…Is Screwed", published in 2013 by
Esquire, Phil Bronstein interviews the Navy SEAL officer about being sent to kill Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden and how that mission reshaped his life. ==References==