It was on the 45-minute bus ride to and from school in Redwood Falls that Jp Lawrence began to mold his future career.
“My school started offering free copies of the Star Tribune, and I tore into those, hungry to learn more about the world,” said Lawrence, who joined the Star Tribune last week in a new position covering southwest Minnesota. He calls it a “childhood dream come true.”
After high school, Lawrence joined the Minnesota National Guard and deployed to Iraq, where he served for nine months. He used his GI Bill money to attend Bard College, where he majored in anthropology, then Columbia University, where he got his master’s in journalism. He has reported for the Albany Times Union in New York and the San Antonio Express News in Texas.
After covering Afghanistan from Kabul for Stars and Stripes and covering the U.S. military in the Middle East from Germany, Lawrence is excited to be back in America. “I think everyone should get a chance to cover their hometown,” he said. Read on to get to know him a bit better.
Why journalism?
Like a lot of reporters, I was one of those kids who was reading all the time. I grew up in the era before smart phones. We didn’t have many channels on TV and my parents weren’t big fans of video games. So I was restless and reading anything I could get my hands on: books from trips to the library, the backs of cereal boxes, labels on shampoo bottles. Peak reading times were during the 45-minute school bus rides each morning and afternoon. My school started offering free copies of the Star Tribune, and I tore into those, hungry to learn more about the world. Now that I’m grown up, every day that I get to report is another chance to be as curious as that kid reading on the school bus.
Favorite story so far in your career?
The stories that I think about the most are the ones where normal people are trying to make do in the face of cruel bureaucratic systems.