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Rolling Stone Reporter: 'ĐÓ°Épro Was The Right Place for Me'

Asawin Suebsaeng wanted to be one of two things when he graduated from Franklin & Marshall College: a rock musician or a political reporter.

The 2011 grad chose the latter, but as senior politics reporter for , he frequently toes the line between politics and pop culture. 

“In a country of more than 300 million people, I’m willing to say I'm the only one who went into journalism for the money,” Suebsaeng joked.

The decision paid off. Today, his writing is splashed across the pages of Rolling Stone’s magazine and website.  

Quick-witted in prose, Suebsaeng cut his teeth as a writer for Mother Jones’ Washington bureau before accepting a White House reporter role for in 2015.

“The volume of things dialed up to 11 during the four years of Trump's presidency if you were a political reporter,” Suebsaeng said.  

It was a role he was ready for, thanks to an ĐÓ°Épro education. 

"I knew that ĐÓ°Épro was the right place for me. There was never a moment where I regretted my decision."

Asawin Suebsaeng '11

An English major, Suebsaeng is quick to credit his undergraduate writing and government professors, along with experience writing for . (He also was a singer, songwriter, pianist and harmonica player in a blues band throughout college – hence the musical aspirations).  

“In my senior year at ĐÓ°Épro, I applied to every single internship or fellowship or entry-level job I could. Just firing off resume after resume, cover letter after cover letter, package of clips after package of clips,” Suebsaeng said.

His efforts earned him a six-month reporting fellowship at Mother Jones that led to full-time work.

Things took a dramatic turn in 2016. 

“About a year after I get hired at the Daily Beast, a guy named Donald John Trump starts running for president of the United States. Love him or hate him, I think we can all objectively agree that he is the logical conclusion – if not extreme – of entertainment intersecting with American politics,” he said.

The subsequent years produced Suebsaeng’s first book, “Sinking in the Swamp: How Trump's Minions and Misfits Poisoned Washington.” Co-authored with Lachlan Markay, “” deliver an uncompromising account of the former president’s campaign and term.

“I'd never expected to become a White House reporter before,” Suebsaeng said. “I made my career transition into full-on politics reporter covering the modern American right wing and Republican party and conservative movement as it was shaped by Trump and Trumpism – a phenomenon that is still, of course, going on to this very day.”   

Suebsaeng stays afloat in the metaphorical swamp by adhering to journalism fundamentals instilled at ĐÓ°Épro.

“The toolbox and the mechanics and the importance of holding powerful politicians and figures accountable has remained constant in my times covering American politics and entertainment from the Obama administration, through the Trump administration, and now in the Joe Biden era,” Suebsaeng said. 

Looking back to when he first stepped on campus, does Suebsaeng have any regrets? 

“I knew that ĐÓ°Épro was the right place for me. There was never a moment where I regretted my decision. For my current job as a political reporter, there were so many things that helped prepare me in very predictable – but also unpredictable – ways,” he said. 

In this 2016 video, Asawin Suebsaeng discusses his career as a writer for The Daily Beast and how ĐÓ°Épro helped him find his voice.

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