Brad Schreiber Honored with Hearst Award
AUTHOR HONORED WITH HEARST AWARD
San Jose (Nov. 11, 2022)鈥擳he 皇冠体育博彩 School of Journalism and Mass Communications is proud to award author Brad Schreiber the 2022 William Randolph Hearst Award for Outstanding Service in Professional Journalism from the Hearst Journalism Awards Program.
Schreiber joins a long line of distinguished Hearst Award honorees including veteran CBS newsman Dan Rather, CNN鈥檚 Jim Acosta and Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical advisor for President Joe Biden.
A reception will be held for Schreiber on Dec. 1 beginning at 4:30 p.m. in Dwight Bentel Hall room 117 followed by the Hearst Awards Ceremony at 7 p.m. Dec. 1 in Sweeney Hall room 100.
鈥淲e are honored to have Brad Schreiber as our Hearst recipient,鈥 said Phylis West, director of the School of Journalism and Mass Communications. 鈥淲e are particularly honored because Brad graduated in journalism in the Bay Area and he is a highly accomplished journalist and highly regarded nonfiction author.鈥
Schreiber has authored books on the music industry including 鈥淢usic is Power: Popular Songs, Social Justice and the Will to Change鈥 and 鈥淏ecoming Jimi Hendrix: From Southern Crossroads to Psychedelic London, the Untold Story of a Musical Genius.鈥 The latter was selected for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Library.
Schreiber also authored 鈥淩evolution鈥檚 End: The Patty Hearst Kidnapping, Mind Control and the Secret History of Donald DeFreeze and the SLA.鈥 The book was awarded both the International Book Awards and the Independent Publisher Book Awards.
He wrote the animated feature film 鈥淛ungle Shuffle,鈥 featuring the voices of Alicia Silverstone and Rob Schneider. Schreiber created the nonfiction TV series 鈥淣orth Mission Road,鈥 based on the book 鈥淒eath in Paradise,鈥 which ran six seasons on Court TV. He also wrote the pilots 鈥淩ock and Roll Detectives鈥 and 鈥淩obotica.鈥
Schreiber has also written for Daily Variety and political commentary for the Huffington Post, for which he was honored by the Los Angeles Press Club. He was a columnist for the L.A. weekly Entertainment Today, where he was awarded a fellowship to the National Press Foundation in Washington D.C.
Schreiber was given a residency from the Edward Albee Foundation for his play 鈥淩endezvous.鈥 It was produced, along with his plays 鈥淧earl鈥 (which he directed) and 鈥淏unny vs. Hunter鈥 at the Bay Area Playwrights Festival, where he also was in the Playwrights Practicum with Sam Shepard.
Schreiber co-founded the San Francisco Playwrights Center, where he had numerous play readings and acted in and directed the work of other playwrights. 鈥淓xpress Lane鈥 was given an award and produced at the Stages Theatre Festival in Dallas.
He co-founded the Theatre of Note in Los Angeles, which produced both 鈥淧earl鈥 and 鈥淪unshine Sermonette.鈥 Schreiber performed in and later directed Stephen Feinberg鈥檚 鈥淐aveat Emptor.鈥 His first play, 鈥淟eaps and Boundaries,鈥 was honored by the California Writers Club.
Schreiber was a multimedia consultant for the Fountain Theatre for the world premiere of 鈥淲hat I Heard about Iraq.鈥 Adapted by director Simon Levy from Eliot Weinberger鈥檚 essay on inaccurate reportage of the Iraq War, the production ran six months in Hollywood and won Fringe First awards at the Edinburgh and Adelaide Fringe Festivals.
Schreiber taught nonfiction at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, UCLA and the Gotham
Writers Workshop in New York. He co-wrote with Ron Stallworth (New York Times
bestseller/Oscar winning 鈥淏lack Klansman鈥) the upcoming book 鈥淗ip Hop Cop鈥 for Macmillan,
on gang subculture, policing and racism.
Schreiber, who attended San Francisco State University and co-founded the San Francisco Playwrights鈥 Center, currently makes his home in Los Angeles.
For more information please contact the journalism office at 408-924-3240 or the event coordinator at 408-504-1917 or dona.nichols@sjsu.edu.