Gator Nation News
“Evil Reporter Chick” Infiltrates Students’ Hearts and Minds to Become
UF’s Teacher of the Year
Basu, author and award-winning journalist, is the Michael and Linda Connelly Lecturer for Narrative Nonfiction in the College of Journalism and Communications.
Moni Basu began her career as a journalist in Tallahassee and has been reporting and editing for 37 years. She’s worked for CNN and major newspapers, including the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and has reported on presidential elections, the 9/11 attacks, hurricanes, earthquakes and war.
She covered the Iraq War since its inception in 2003 and on several trips was embedded with the U.S. Army. Her resulting e-book, Chaplain Turner’s War (2012, Agate Publishing), grew from a series of stories on an Army chaplain there. A platoon sergeant gave her the affectionate nickname “Evil Reporter Chick,” and it stuck. You can follow that moniker on Instagram.
She claims she’s no superhero but she was featured once as a war reporter in Marvel Comics’ “Civil War” series.
Published
March 1, 2021
Prof B, as she is known by her students, began teaching advanced reporting and writing classes at UF in 2018 and quickly distinguished herself by being named Teacher of the Year. She’s also a freelance writer, and she teaches in an MFA program in narrative media at the University of Georgia.
Basu was born in Kolkata, India, and has been shaped by a life spent straddling two cultures.
She recently took time to answer 20 questions for Gator Nation News:
CNN sent Basu to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in January 2010 to cover the catastrophic earthquake. “This car had been set on fire after the decomposing bodies of two people were found inside,” she says.
After living in the United States for more than three decades, Basu became a citizen in August 2008. “The ceremony was bittersweet for me because I had to renounce all allegiance to India,” she says.
In 2017, Basu reported a series of stories on the new India. She’s seen here in New Delhi, filming for a short video she produced on the vast income inequalities in her homeland.
Basu was left on the steps of an orphanage in Kolkata, India, at 1 day old. She was adopted six days later by Debabrata and Kalyani Basu. Her father, a world-renowned statistician, taught for several years at FSU.
Basu has been following the story of Noor al-Zahra, a girl from Baghdad born in 2005 with spina bifida. American soldiers shuttled the girl to Atlanta for lifesaving surgery, but her life has been difficult since she was returned to Iraq at about 9 months old. Basu did a follow-up story in 2013 and traveled to Uganda in 2017 when the girl had more surgery to relieve fluid buildup in her brain. “I carry a school photo of Noor in my wallet as though she were the daughter I never had,” says Basu. Photo by David Holloway

Where to find and follow Moni Basu
Basu’s personal and professional life has been filled with travel. Here, she visits the Grand Canyon.