Beyond the Story
Growing up, NC State English alumnus Dwuan June had three career aspirations: Become a comedian, a referee for the NFL or a journalist.
The 1990 graduate chose journalism and never looked back.
He has spent his 33-year and counting career immersed in the newspaper world, briefly as a reporter but mainly as an art director and assistant news editor. Since 2001, he worked in those roles for various sections at The Washington Post.
“I love it,” June says of his profession and reason for remaining in an industry that has changed tremendously in the past few decades.
“I believe in journalism’s cause, which is to be a sort of backstop for anything that affects the average person,” he notes. “If there’s information that needs to get out or a story that needs to be told, right or wrong, that’s what I’m into. So at the end of the day, I can say, OK, I did my part.”
The secret to June’s longevity is adaptability. He stays with or ahead of industry trends and takes classes or teaches himself to become proficient at them.
In his current role at The Washington Post, June oversees the visual style of the front section of the paper’s weekend editions and other departments, including special sections and projects. Among his responsibilities are choosing (with other editors) the stories to go on the front and inside pages and which photos, illustrations and graphics to use.
“I make it easier for the reader to visualize and understand the story,” he explains. “The challenge is figuring out what readers want to read and see because there’s so much information out there and making our product a viable fit for the many different media platforms today.”
June’s love affair with journalism started when he was a kid and continued through middle school, high school and college. He worked at each school’s newspaper and became the first African American editor-in-chief of Technician at NC State. His college experience led to newspaper internships and his professional career.
His time as a reporter, however, was short-lived. He says the turning point came when he was an intern at the Fayetteville Times. He interviewed the grieving mother and boyfriend of a missing girl who June later discovered was killed by her boyfriend. After that assignment, June questioned whether he had the mindset or personality to write those types of stories.
“There are many different things to do in journalism, so I got more into design and graphics,” he says.
Over the years, June moved from reporter to news editor and art director and worked at various newspapers, including the Fayetteville Times, Charlotte Observer, Atlanta-Journal Constitution and Washington Post. Along the way, he participated in myriad stories. He shares five of the most memorable in the box below.
Charlotte Observer — June was the lead designer for the paper’s “Taking Back Our Neighborhoods” project. It featured five neglected areas of the city and the residents who fought for their revival. It was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in 1994.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution — June was a designer for the paper’s series about missing children and prostitution. The public’s response to the series helped authorities locate a missing girl at a bus station in Tennessee.
Technician — June was managing editor during the release of Personal Fouls. The book presented a controversial look at the university’s basketball program during the 1986-1987 season, which launched an NCAA investigation. The fallout from the book continued and ended while he was editor-in-chief. Lesson learned? Report the story – good or bad –report the facts.
Washington Post — June was a designer for the paper’s coverage of what he describes as “two different threats to our democracy.” The American Airlines Flight 77 that crashed into the Pentagon as part of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001 and the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol Building in 2021.