Archibald was born in Alabaster, Alabama.[2] His father was a Methodist minister and the family moved several times as he was assigned to different churches, finishing his career in Decatur.[3] Archibald attended Banks High School in Birmingham, graduating in 1981,[4] and in 1986 earned a degree in journalism from the University of Alabama.[2] He has said that he decided on his major because he loved working for the student newspaper, The Crimson White.[5]
Career
He joined The Birmingham News, a forerunner of the news website AL.com, in 1986.[2] He became a metro columnist[1] and in 2004 a political commentator.[2]
In 2020, he was awarded a Nieman Foundation fellowship at Harvard University, where he studied the role of the media in shaping public perceptions of crime and the police and whether crime reporting contributes to a "culture of fear".[8] In 2023, he was a writer in residence at Boston University.[5]
In 2021, with Roy S. Johnson, he co-hosted Unjustifiable, a six-part podcast on Reckon radio about the 1979 shooting of Bonita Carter, a Black woman, by a Birmingham police officer and its repercussions for the police department and the city. The series won the 2021 Edward R. Murrow Award for best podcast by a small digital news organization.[9]
From January 2022 he was lead reporter in an investigation by AL.com of abusive policing in the small town of Brookside, which was the co-winner of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting; the series was described there as having "prompted the resignation of the police chief, four new laws and a state audit".[10][11]
Archibald and his wife Alecia have three children.[13] His son Ramsey Archibald is also a reporter for AL.com, and the two have collaborated,[2] including on the Brookside policing investigation.[6][10][14]
Publications
Archibald's book Shaking the Gates of Hell was published by Alfred A. Knopf in 2021. It examines the failure of the Methodist Church and of his own father to support the 1960s Civil Rights struggle in the South.[3][15]
^Archibald, John (2021). Shaking the Gates of Hell: A Search for Family and Truth in the Wake of the Civil Rights Revolution. Knopf. ISBN9780525658115.