Education
Lee says that he was given the opportunity to evacuate on August 29 by another editor, but chose to stay and cover the story.
Lee says that he was given the opportunity to evacuate on August 29 by another editor, but chose to stay and cover the story.
He shared a for breaking news coverage of Hurricane Katrina as part of a team at The Times-Picayune of New Orleans. From 2006 to 2010, Lee wrote for The New York Times and from early 2011 to November 2012 he was a senior reporter at The Huffington Post. Since then Lee is a national reporter for Microsoft and National Broadcasting Company, where he writes for the network"s digital arm.
Lee was raised in Chesilhurst, New Jersey.
As a child, he showed an early interest in writing and athletics while attending the Milton Hershey School in Hershey, Pennsylvania. After getting a degree in communications studies at Camden County College, he earned a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism from Rowan University.
While at Rowan, he wrote for the school newspaper The Whit and was involved with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Lee began his career reporting on police and crime at the Philadelphia Tribune and the Trentonian of Trenton, New Jersey. Outside of his work as a daily reporter, his work has also appeared in the magazines Ebony, Essence, Real Health and The Crisis.
Times-Picayune and Hurricane Katrina As a reporter for The Times-Picayune, Lee covered Hurricane Katrina as it happened.
He had arrived in New Orleans only four months before. His article "Nightmare in the 9th Ward all too real for one woman" was published on September 1, 2005—exclusively online because the newspaper could not be printed. New York Times From 2006 to 2010, Lee was a staff reporter for The New York Times, where he primarily covered Harlem.
During this period, Lee also reported from Albany and Brooklyn and contributed to a series of videos called "New York On Less".
Huffington Post In March 2011, Lee was hired to cover "national issues that impact the black community" for Huffington Post"s Black Voices. The move was a consequence of America Online"s acquisition and expansion of Huffington.
= Reporting on Trayvon Martin Lee did not learn of Trayvon Martin until more than a week after the teenager"s death, but he was one of the first national reporters to cover the story, for Huffington Post"s Black Voices on March 8, 2012. He continued filing stories on the case nearly every day that month.
He believes that his "early coverage definitely helped light the fire.
Before we pushed the story, few if any major national news outlets were covering lieutenant" Lee appeared on Countdown with Keith Olbermann to discuss the story multiple times. = Microsoft and National Broadcasting Company In November 2012, Lee joined Microsoft and National Broadcasting Company as a national reporter for its digital unit, reporting on social justice issues and the impact of politics and policy on everyday people. Lee described his move to Microsoft and National Broadcasting Company as a chance to "flex different muscles" as a journalist.