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{{Short description|Venezuelan journalist}} | |||
{{Expand language|topic=|langcode=es|otherarticle=Nelson Bocaranda|date=June 2023}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2023}} | |||
{{Infobox person | |||
⚫ | '''Nelson Bocaranda Sardi''' (born 18 April 1945{{sfn|Gil_Guzmán|1994|p=132}}) is a ]n television commentator, ], investigative journalist,{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|p=138}} and founder of the ] website. He has received several awards for his work, including the 1985 National Journalism Award. | ||
| name = Nelson Bocaranda | |||
| birth_name = Nelson Bocaranda Sardi | |||
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1945|4|18}} | |||
| birth_place = ], ] | |||
| occupation = Journalist | |||
| nationality = Venezuelan | |||
}} | |||
⚫ | '''Nelson Bocaranda Sardi''' (born 18 April 1945) |
||
== Early life and education == | |||
⚫ | == |
||
Bocaranda was born in ], ] on 18 April 1945{{sfn|Gil_Guzmán|1994|p= 132}} as the oldest of five children of Alfredo Bocaranda González and Italia Sardi Consalvi de Bocaranda.<ref name= Socorro>{{ill|Milagros Socorro|lt= Socorro, Milagros |es}} (4 August 2012). "" . ''milagrossocorro.com'' (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 August 2023.</ref> Of Spanish and Italian ancestry, Bocaranda's grandfather was a storekeeper and his father was a pharmacist.<ref name= Socorro/> The family moved to ] when Nelson was two, and he grew up in the ] area of the city.<ref name= Socorro/> He was educated at La Salle de la Colina, graduating in 1962; his interest in reading was inspired by his grandmother, and he was encouraged by one of his Catholic teachers to become a journalist.<ref name= Socorro/> | |||
⚫ | Bocaranda began studying journalism |
||
⚫ | Before he finished his secondary education, Bocaranda began studying journalism at the ];<ref name= Socorro/> he began working for the television station ] under ], who was his journalism professor.<ref name=VenevisionBio>{{Cite web |date=3 August 2001 |title=Nelson Bocaranda |url=https://www.venevision.net/programacion/generos/informacion/v_populi/biografia.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010803193728/https://www.venevision.net/programacion/generos/informacion/v_populi/biografia.htm |archive-date=3 August 2001 |access-date=13 July 2023 |website=]}}</ref> During his university tenure, Bocaranda worked for various radio stations in Caracas, including Radio Aeropuerto, {{ill|Radio Capital (Venezuela)|lt=Radio Capital|es}}, Radio Continente and {{ill|Circuito Digital Kys|lt=KYS-FM|es}}.<ref name=VenevisionBio/> | ||
On ], Bocaranda had a weekday show, "''Los Runrunes de Nelson''" or "''The Rumors of Nelson''", which began in 1998.<ref name=":1" /> Bocaranda's program primarily included the journalist reporting political rumors.<ref name=":2" /> In June 2009, Bocaranda would face controversy after ] said that he was "irresponsible" for spreading "false rumors" that the Venezuelan subsidiary of BBVA would be placed for sale.<ref>{{Cite web |last= |date=2009-06-22 |title=La filial venezolana del BBVA desmiente los rumores de venta |url=https://cincodias.elpais.com/cincodias/2009/06/22/empresas/1245837535_850215.html |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=] |language=es}}</ref> Later in 2009, the Venezuelan government reportedly said it would refuse to renew Unión Radio's license if Bocaranda did not prevent his criticism, with "''Los Runrunes de Nelson''" being cancelled.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3">{{Cite web |last=Marcano |first=Diego |date=1 June 2017 |title=How Venezuela’s Independent Digital News Outlets Are Covering the Turmoil in Their Country |url=https://niemanreports.org/articles/how-venezuelas-independent-digital-news-outlets-are-covering-the-turmoil-in-their-country/ |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=] |language=en-US}}</ref> The following year, Bocaranda and his son would create the ] website.<ref name=":3" /> Bocaranda would go on to gain much of his following covering information on the ] at a time when information about his health was scarce.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
== |
==Career== | ||
=== Radio, television and newspaper === | |||
According to Bocaranda's former employer ] in 2001, he received multiple awards including Venezuela's ''Premio Nacional de Periodismo'' (National Journalism Prize) and the Monseñor Pellín Award.<ref name=":1" /> Francisco Toro, founder of ], would criticize Bocaranda's work in 2009 saying that his career was based on rumors and described the journalist as " guy who took a perverse pride in publishing rumor, speculation and innuendo as fact".<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |last=Toro |first=Francisco |date=2009-09-23 |title=He can run run, but he can't hide... |url=https://www.caracaschronicles.com/2009/09/23/he-can-run-run-but-he-cant-hide/ |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=] |language=en-US}}</ref> Venezuelan journalist Diego Marcano of ] would describe Bocaranda in 2017 as "one of Venezuela’s most respected journalists".<ref name=":3" /> | |||
Bocaranda left ] to work for ] (RCTV) in the early 1980s, returning to Venevisión in 1988.<ref name=VenevisionBio/> In 1989, he worked as a foreign correspondent for ] (VTV) in New York.<ref name=VenevisionBio/> During the 1990s, he had a political opinion show on Venevisión called ''Vox Populi'';<ref name=VenevisionBio/><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.producto.com.ve/pro/medios/nelson-bocaranda-nadie-quiere-tener-problemas-gobierno |website= producto.com.ve |title= Nelson Bocaranda: 'Nada quiere tener problemas con el gobierno' |language= es |trans-title = Nelson Bocaranda: No one wants to have problems with the government |date= 31 July 2015 |access-date= 5 August 2023}}</ref> ''A puerta cerrada'' and ''En confianza'' were other popular television shows he moderated.<ref name= VenezuelanPress/><ref name= FatherTwitter>{{cite web |url= https://elestimulo.com/espectaculos/2015-07-09/nelson-bocaranda-vuelve-delante-de-las-camaras/ |title= Nelson Bocaranda vuelve delante de las cámaras |language = es |trans-title= Nelson Bocaranda returns in front of the cameras |date= 9 July 2015 |access-date= 7 August 2023 |publisher= El Estímulo}}</ref> By 1996, Bocaranda held primetime television broadcasts in Caracas.<ref name=CrimeWave>{{cite news |last= Martinez |first= Tomas Eloy |title= Latin America's crime wave |work= The Plain Dealer |location = Cleveland, Ohio |date= 26 September 1996 |page = 11B |quote= Fine Brazilian magazines such as ''Veja'' or ''Isto E'', as well as TV programs with mass audiences – for example, those hosted by ] in Buenos Aires or Nelson Bocaranda in Caracas – are devoting their front pages or prime-time broadcasts to these topics.}}</ref> | |||
Bocaranda returned to late night television at ] in 2015 following a long absence from regular television.<ref name= FatherTwitter/> | |||
== Personal life == | |||
He has been described as supporting the opposition of the Venezuelan government.<ref>{{cite news |date=14 March 2012 |title=Opposition journalist in Venezuela alleges plot to damage his reputation |language=en |work=LatAm Journalism Review by the Knight Center |url=https://latamjournalismreview.org/articles/opposition-journalist-in-venezuela-alleges-plot-to-damage-his-reputation/}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{cite news |date=8 March 2012 |title=Venezuelan journalist in eye of Chavez cancer storm |language=en |work=] |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-chavez-journalist/venezuelan-journalist-in-eye-of-chavez-cancer-storm-idUSBRE8270TD20120308 |access-date=7 June 2023 |quote=With a daily drip-drip of rumors and details about Chavez’s condition, the openly pro-opposition Bocaranda has garnered more than 670,000 followers ... Bocaranda’s investigative work on Chavez’s health has brought him more fame than at any point in a half-century media career spanning back to when he was 16}}</ref> | |||
On {{ill|Circuito Unión Radio|lt=Unión Radio|es}}, Bocaranda had a weekday show, ''Los Runrunes de Nelson'' or ''The Rumors of Nelson'', which began in 1998.<ref name=VenevisionBio/> Bocaranda also wrote ] for several Venezuelan newspapers.<ref name=VenevisionBio/> | |||
=== Runrunes, Twitter and Chávez's cancer === | |||
{{further|Censorship in Venezuela}} | |||
Described as a pro-opposition journalist,<ref name=ReutersCancerStorm>{{cite news |last= Cawthorne |first= Andrew|date=8 March 2012 |title=Venezuelan journalist in eye of Chavez cancer storm |work=] |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-chavez-journalist/venezuelan-journalist-in-eye-of-chavez-cancer-storm-idUSBRE8270TD20120308 |access-date=7 June 2023 |quote=With a daily drip-drip of rumors and details about Chavez's condition, the openly pro-opposition Bocaranda has garnered more than 670,000 followers ... Bocaranda's investigative work on Chavez’s health has brought him more fame than at any point in a half-century media career spanning back to when he was 16}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first= Natalia |last= Mazotte |date=14 March 2012 |title=Opposition journalist in Venezuela alleges plot to damage his reputation |work=LatAm Journalism Review by the Knight Center |url= https://latamjournalismreview.org/articles/opposition-journalist-in-venezuela-alleges-plot-to-damage-his-reputation/ |access-date= 9 August 2023}}</ref> Bocaranda has criticized both ] and ], and their governments.<ref name= Ideal/> ''Los Runrunes de Nelson'' was cancelled in 2009 after the Venezuelan government reportedly said that it would revoke Unión Radio's license if Bocaranda's criticism was allowed to continue on air.<ref name =MigrateOnline>{{cite news |first= Maye |last= Primera |date= 26 June 2014 |title= Venezuela’s journalists migrate online to escape government censorship |url= https://english.elpais.com/elpais/2014/06/26/inenglish/1403800928_855864.html |work= El País |access-date= 7 August 2023}}</ref> The following year, Bocaranda and his son created the ] website.<ref name= Abanhassan2016/> Janan Abanhassan and Andrés Cañizález wrote in the ''Comunicación: estudios venezolanos de comunicación'' journal in 2016 that the website was born from the censorship that forced Bocaranda off the radio; they named Bocaranda as a "leader of public opinion in Venezuela" for "becoming the spokesperson for the truth, for disseminating the information under investigative support and for having trust and credibility in Venezuelan society".<ref name= Abanhassan2016>{{cite journal | |||
|first1=Janan |last1=Abanhassan |first2= Andrés |last2=Cañizález | |||
|title= Nelson Bocaranda Sardi como líder de la opinión pública en Venezuela | |||
|language= es|trans-title= Nelson Bocaranda Sardi as leader of public opinion in Venezuela | |||
|journal= Comunicación: estudios venezolanos de comunicación|date= 2016 |issue= 174 |pages=13–19 |issn=0798-1856 | |||
|url= http://biblioteca.gumilla.org/bases/biblo/texto/COM2016174_13-19.pdf | |||
|quote= ... portal web del periodista Nelson Bocaranda Sardi nace por un hecho de censura que sufre dicho periodista, y se ve en la obligación de salir del aire con su programa radial Runrunes ... es un líder en la opinión pública venezolana por convertirse en el vocero de la verdad, por difundir las informaciones bajo sustento investigativo y por poseer confianza y credibilidad en la sociedad venezolana. | |||
}}</ref> | |||
Bocaranda was the first to reveal Chávez's 2011 ].<ref name=ReutersCancerStorm /><ref name=NoDigo/><ref name=VenezuelansFlock/> Contrary to Article 143 of the 2009 ], which disallows censorship of information about public officers,{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|pp=136, 147}} and with the ] looming,{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|p= 149}} there were no precise medical reports, and information about Chávez's health was "tightly controlled by him and the closest members of his Government" according to Carolina Acosta-Alzuru in the 2016 book, ''Health Communication in the Changing Media Landscape''.{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|p=136}} On 9 May, Chávez cancelled a trip, saying he had knee pain, and on 10 June, Maduro stated that Chávez had surgery in Havana, Cuba for a pelvic abscess.{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|p=138}} The government continued to deny concerns about Chávez's health when, on 25 June, Bocaranda revealed that Chávez had cancer.{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|p= 138}}<ref>{{cite web |url= https://runrun.es/runrunes-de-bocaranda/runrunes/20577/rompiendo-el-cerco-informativo-las-verdades-de-la-enfermedad-del-presidente-chavez/ |title= Rompiendo el cerco informativo: Las verdades de la enfermedad del Presidente Chávez|language=es |trans-title= Breaking the information hedge: the truths of President Chávez's illness |date = 25 June 2011 |access-date= 9 August 2023|website= ]}}</ref> Until that time, information about Chávez's health was held secret by the government;<ref name=ReutersCancerStorm /><ref name =MigrateOnline/><ref name=NoDigo/><ref name=VenezuelansFlock>{{cite news |last= Forero |first = Juan |title= Venezuelans flock to columnist for news on Chavez cancer |url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/venezuelans-flock-to-columnist-for-news-on-chavez-cancer/2012/03/17/gIQAOzJJJS_story.html |work = The Washington Post |date= 17 March 2012 |access-date= 6 August 2023 |quote= In June, he was the first to reveal that Chavez had cancer, which the president confirmed days later in a dramatic televised speech. Then, in the early morning hours of Feb. 20, Bocaranda issued a series of tweets reporting a recurrence of cancer, which Chavez confirmed the next day. That last scoop generated 80,000 more followers to @NelsonBocaranda, where he now has nearly 570,000 readers.}}</ref> Chávez's diagnosis was confirmed by government officials the day after Bocaranda revealed it.{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|p=138}}<ref name= NoDigo/><ref name= VenezuelansFlock/> Alzuru writes that the secrecy was because Chávez's "close allies suspected that no other ] would be able to win elections as easily as Chávez did. That is why they played the card of a recuperating Chávez in charge until the very end", while investigative journalists "filled the information vacuum", being the first to report information based on "sources they had cultivated for decades", which resulted in them being "maligned by Government officials who denied their stories, only to have them confirmed a few days later by Chavez himself".{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|pp= 148–149}} | |||
Bocaranda's revelation, which was followed by others as Chávez's illness progressed,{{sfn|Acosta-Alzuru|2016|pp=138–139, 141–142}} resulted in him receiving more widespread recognition than at any time in his career.<ref name=ReutersCancerStorm/><ref name=VenezuelansFlock/> According to ''El Estímulo'', in 2015, younger people were more likely to recognize him as "The Father of Venezelan Twitter", in contrast to older people who remember him more as a moderator of several television shows.<ref name= FatherTwitter/> Bocaranda's Twitter account is described as a "must read" by ]<ref name= NoDigo/> and Reuters;<ref name=ReutersCancerStorm /> he had 2,600 Twitter followers in 2009,<ref name= FatherTwitter/> 570,000 followers in 2012,<ref name= NoDigo/> 1.97 million by 2015 (compared then to Maduro's 2.35 million),<ref name=Ideal/> and more than 3 million in 2021.<ref>{{cite journal |first1= Rosario J. |last1= Puertas-Hidalgo |first2= Karen C. |last2= Valdiviezo-Abad |first3= Lilia K. |last3= Capro-Jimenez |url= https://www.iiisci.org/journal/PDV/risci/pdfs/CA514CC21.pdf |title= Twitter: análisis comparativo de los periodistas de Latinoamérica |language= es |trans-title= Twitter: comparative analysis of Latinamerican journalists |journal = Sistemas, Cibernetica e Informatica |volume = 18 |issue = 1 |year= 2021 |issn= 1690-8627}}</ref> | |||
Bocaranda's Twitter was hacked in 2016 and the hackers used the account to Tweet that Bocaranda acknowledged being a US ] (CIA) puppet.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.univision.com/noticias/acoso-cibernetico/el-periodista-venezolano-nelson-bocaranda-denuncia-hackeo-en-twitter-y-robo-de-2-millones-de-seguidores |title= El periodista venezolano Nelson Bocaranda denuncia hackeo en Twitter y robo de 2 millones de seguidores|language=es |trans-title= Venezuelan journalist Nelson Bocaranda denounces hacking on Twitter and theft of 2 million followers |date= 7 May 2016 |accessdate= 11 August 2023 |publisher= ]}}</ref> | |||
=== Responses === | |||
In response to Bocaranda reporting June 2009 rumors that ] would be sold, '']'' published that the "Venezuelan branch of BBVA today denied ... the 'irresponsible' rumors spread by journalist Nelson Bocaranda, on his radio program Runrunes", adding that "this information has already been denied both in the Runrunes program" and by another agency that reported it.<ref>{{Cite web |last= |date=22 June 2009 |title=La filial venezolana del BBVA desmiente los rumores de venta |trans-title= The Venezuelan subsidiary of BBVA denies rumors of sale|url=https://cincodias.elpais.com/cincodias/2009/06/22/empresas/1245837535_850215.html |access-date=18 July 2023 |website=] |language=es}}</ref> | |||
The Venezuelan Instituto Prensa y Sociedad (IPYS – Press and Society Institute) issued a report in 2013 on pressure directed by the judicial system at journalists who were critical of the government, listing as one of the cases a court summons to Bocaranda after he revealed the cancer diagnosis of Chávez which stated that Bocaranda had been "associated with acts of violence after the April 14 elections".<ref name=IPYS>{{cite news |last= Fernández |first= Nélida |title= IPYS acusa al sistema judicial de presionar a periodistas en Venezuela |language= es |trans-title= IPYS accuses the judicial system of pressuring journalists in Venezuela |work = La Informacion |publisher= ] |url= https://www.lainformacion.com/espana/ipys-acusa-al-sistema-judicial-de-presionar-a-periodistas-en-venezuela_Rbzmv765p5qM5dkDCBYDD/ |date= 11 August 2013 |access-date= 6 August 2023 |quote= La directora ejecutiva del Instituto Prensa y Sociedad (IPYS) en Venezuela, Marienela Balbi, advirtió de que en este país se usa el sistema judicial para aplicar 'mecanismos sutiles' que tienen como objetivo censurar y 'asfixiar' a los medios de comunicación que mantienen una línea crítica hacia el Gobierno. ... El informe del IPYS incluye además la citación a tribunales el mes pasado al periodista Nelson Bocaranda, conocido dentro y fuera del país por haber dado reportes no oficiales sobre la salud del fallecido presidente Hugo Chávez y a quien el Gobierno asoció a los hechos de violencia tras las elecciones del 14 de abril. <br /> [The executive director of the Press and Society Institute (IPYS) in Venezuela, Marienela Balbi, warned that in this country the judicial system is used to apply 'subtle mechanisms' that aim to censor and 'suffocate' the media that maintain a critical line towards the Government. ... The IPYS report also includes the summons to court last month of the journalist Nelson Bocaranda, known inside and outside the country for having given unofficial reports on the health of the late President Hugo Chávez and whom the Government associated with acts of violence after the April 14 elections.}}</ref> | |||
Bocaranda was described in 2011 and 2012 ''Wall Street Journal'' articles as a "prominent"<ref>{{cite news |last1=Luhnow |first1=David |last2=Minaya |first2=Ezequiel |date=30 June 2011 |title=Health woes cause Chávez to postpone key summit |page=A1 |work=The Wall Street Journal |quote=Nelson Bocaranda, a prominent Venezuelan newspaper columnist, has reported that the cancer has spread to other organs and that the president is undergoing radiation therapy in Havana.}}</ref> and "respected Venezuelan columnist".<ref>{{cite news |last1=Minaya |first1=Ezequiel |last2=de Cordoba |first2=Jose |date=7 April 2012 |title=An ailing Chavez prays for time – Venezuela leader appeals to Christ for his life at mass; reports say he'll seek treatment in Brazil |page=A11 |work=The Wall Street Journal |quote=Still, Nelson Bocaranda, a respected Venezuelan columnist ... Last June, Mr. Bocaranda was the first journalist to say that Mr. Chavez had been operated on for cancer in Cuba. In February, Mr. Bocaranda was the first to say that Mr. Chavez' cancer had returned and he would undergo another operation in Cuba.}}</ref> In 2015, the Spanish newspaper '']'' described Bocaranda as a "veteran" and "the most popular journalist in Venezuela", citing his Twitter followers, adding that "different spheres of the Venezuelan government" said Bocaranda worked for the CIA due to his reports on Chávez's illness; the allegations have never been substantiated.<ref name=Ideal>{{cite news |last= Barrera |first= Javier F. |date= 20 June 2015 |access-date= 6 August 2023 |work = ] |title= 'En Venezuela se ha restringido la libertad y con Twitter hemos crecido' |language = es |trans-title = 'En Venezuela liberty has been restricted and with Twitter we have grown' |url= https://www.ideal.es/granada/201506/20/venezuela-restringido-libertad-twitter-20150619211433.html|quote= ... uno de los periodistas venezolanos más populares de su país, crítico con los gobiernos de Chávez y Maduro ... Es el periodista más popular en Venezuela, con 1,97 millones de seguidores en Twitter ... A sus 70 años, este veterano periodista vive en la cresta de la ola de su carrera profesional, ya que fue el primero en informar Hugo Chávez, se encontraba en enfermo. Esto provocó que desde diferentes esferas del gobierno venezolano se le acusara de trabajar para la CIA, algo que nunca se pudo demostrar. Fue crítico con Chávez y lo es con su sucesor, Nicolás Maduro.<br /> Hugo Chávez was ill. This caused different spheres of the Venezuelan government to accuse him of working for the CIA, something that could never be proven. He was critical of Chávez and is critical of his successor, Nicolás Maduro.}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | == Awards == | ||
Bocaranda received various awards in Venezuela. He was awarded the Municipal Prize in Journalism in 1965 and 1967.{{sfn|Gil_Guzmán|1994|p=132}} He was awarded the National Prize of Journalism from the Fundación Premio Nacional de Periodismo (National Journalism Award Foundation) in 1985,{{sfn|Gil_Guzmán|1994|p= 132}}<ref name="VenezuelanPress">{{Cite web |title=Venezuelan Press: Nelson Bocaranda |url=http://www.venezuelanpress.com/nelson-bocaranda/ |access-date=19 July 2023 |website=Venezuelan Press |language=es-ES}}</ref><ref name=NoDigo/> and the {{ill|Jesús María Pellín|lt=Monseñor Pellín|es}} Award from the ],<ref name=VenevisionBio/><ref name=NoDigo>{{Cite web |date= 21 March 2012 |title=Bocaranda: 'no digo mentiras' sobre la salud de Chávez |trans-title= Bocaranda: 'I don't tell lies' about Chávez's health |url= https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2012/03/120316_venezuela_entrevista_nelson_bocaranda_salud_chavez_jp |access-date= 6 August 2023|website=] |language=es |quote= A los 66 años, el reconocido periodista venezolano Nelson Bocaranda ... Es así que su cuenta en Twitter, donde tiene más de 570.000 seguidores, se ha convertido en lectura obligada, especialmente luego de que el mes pasado lanzara la primicia sobre el nuevo viaje a La Habana de Chávez por la recurrencia del cáncer. Bocaranda dio la información, las autoridades lo desmintieron y al día siguiente Chávez, quien a los 57 años buscará en las elecciones de octubre un tercer mandato, lo confirmó. <br /> he released the scoop on Chavez's new trip to Havana for the recurrence of cancer. Bocaranda gave the information, the authorities denied it and the next day Chávez, who at the age of 57 will seek a third term in the October elections, confirmed it.}}</ref><ref name="PellinAward">{{Cite web |last=Salomón |first=Luisa |date=17 October 2019 |title=Prodavinci recibió el Premio Monseñor Pellín 2019 al Reportaje Web del año |trans-title= Prodavinci received the Monsignor Pellín 2019 Award for Web Report of the Year|url=https://prodavinci.com/prodavinci-recibio-el-premio-monsenor-pellin-2019-al-reportaje-web-del-ano/ |access-date=19 July 2023 |website=] |language=es}}</ref> recognized in the latter's Person of the Year category in 2019.<ref name=PellinAward/> | |||
==Publications== | |||
* ''El Poder de los Secretos'' (2015) with Diego Arroyo Gil, Planeta de Venezuela, {{ISBN| 978-9802715480}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
=== Book sources === | |||
* {{cite book |last=Acosta-Alzuru |first=Carolina |year=2016 |chapter=No News is Bad News: Examining the Discourse Around Hugo Chávez’s Illness |title=Health Communication in the Changing Media Landscape |pages=135–157 |editor-last1=Vemula |editor-first1=R. |editor-last2=Gavaravarapu |editor-first2=S. |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |doi=10.1007/978-3-319-33539-1_8 |isbn=978-3319815404}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Gil Guzmán |first=Rosamelia |title=Figuras sobresalientes de la comunicación social: un perfil de ejemplaridad de los comunicadores |publisher=] |year=1994 |language=es |trans-title= Outstanding figures of social communication: an exemplary profile of communicators}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* {{Twitter | nelsonbocaranda }} | |||
* , The World Today, abc.net.au | |||
* , Wall Street Journal | |||
* , Insight on the News at findarticles.com | |||
* , Religion in the News | |||
* {{in lang|es}} , Venevision | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bocaranda, Nelson}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Bocaranda, Nelson}} | ||
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{{Venezuela-bio-stub}} |
Latest revision as of 17:56, 8 November 2024
Venezuelan journalistNelson Bocaranda Sardi (born 18 April 1945) is a Venezuelan television commentator, columnist, investigative journalist, and founder of the Runrunes website. He has received several awards for his work, including the 1985 National Journalism Award.
Early life and education
Bocaranda was born in Boconó, Venezuela on 18 April 1945 as the oldest of five children of Alfredo Bocaranda González and Italia Sardi Consalvi de Bocaranda. Of Spanish and Italian ancestry, Bocaranda's grandfather was a storekeeper and his father was a pharmacist. The family moved to Caracas when Nelson was two, and he grew up in the San Bernardino area of the city. He was educated at La Salle de la Colina, graduating in 1962; his interest in reading was inspired by his grandmother, and he was encouraged by one of his Catholic teachers to become a journalist.
Before he finished his secondary education, Bocaranda began studying journalism at the Universidad Católica Andrés Bello; he began working for the television station Venevisión under Óscar Yanes, who was his journalism professor. During his university tenure, Bocaranda worked for various radio stations in Caracas, including Radio Aeropuerto, Radio Capital [es], Radio Continente and KYS-FM [es].
Career
Radio, television and newspaper
Bocaranda left Venevisión to work for Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV) in the early 1980s, returning to Venevisión in 1988. In 1989, he worked as a foreign correspondent for Venezolana de Televisión (VTV) in New York. During the 1990s, he had a political opinion show on Venevisión called Vox Populi; A puerta cerrada and En confianza were other popular television shows he moderated. By 1996, Bocaranda held primetime television broadcasts in Caracas.
Bocaranda returned to late night television at VIVOplay in 2015 following a long absence from regular television.
On Unión Radio [es], Bocaranda had a weekday show, Los Runrunes de Nelson or The Rumors of Nelson, which began in 1998. Bocaranda also wrote columns for several Venezuelan newspapers.
Runrunes, Twitter and Chávez's cancer
Further information: Censorship in VenezuelaDescribed as a pro-opposition journalist, Bocaranda has criticized both Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro, and their governments. Los Runrunes de Nelson was cancelled in 2009 after the Venezuelan government reportedly said that it would revoke Unión Radio's license if Bocaranda's criticism was allowed to continue on air. The following year, Bocaranda and his son created the Runrunes website. Janan Abanhassan and Andrés Cañizález wrote in the Comunicación: estudios venezolanos de comunicación journal in 2016 that the website was born from the censorship that forced Bocaranda off the radio; they named Bocaranda as a "leader of public opinion in Venezuela" for "becoming the spokesperson for the truth, for disseminating the information under investigative support and for having trust and credibility in Venezuelan society".
Bocaranda was the first to reveal Chávez's 2011 cancer diagnosis. Contrary to Article 143 of the 2009 Constitution of Venezuela, which disallows censorship of information about public officers, and with the 2012 Venezuelan presidential election looming, there were no precise medical reports, and information about Chávez's health was "tightly controlled by him and the closest members of his Government" according to Carolina Acosta-Alzuru in the 2016 book, Health Communication in the Changing Media Landscape. On 9 May, Chávez cancelled a trip, saying he had knee pain, and on 10 June, Maduro stated that Chávez had surgery in Havana, Cuba for a pelvic abscess. The government continued to deny concerns about Chávez's health when, on 25 June, Bocaranda revealed that Chávez had cancer. Until that time, information about Chávez's health was held secret by the government; Chávez's diagnosis was confirmed by government officials the day after Bocaranda revealed it. Alzuru writes that the secrecy was because Chávez's "close allies suspected that no other chavista would be able to win elections as easily as Chávez did. That is why they played the card of a recuperating Chávez in charge until the very end", while investigative journalists "filled the information vacuum", being the first to report information based on "sources they had cultivated for decades", which resulted in them being "maligned by Government officials who denied their stories, only to have them confirmed a few days later by Chavez himself".
Bocaranda's revelation, which was followed by others as Chávez's illness progressed, resulted in him receiving more widespread recognition than at any time in his career. According to El Estímulo, in 2015, younger people were more likely to recognize him as "The Father of Venezelan Twitter", in contrast to older people who remember him more as a moderator of several television shows. Bocaranda's Twitter account is described as a "must read" by BBC Mundo and Reuters; he had 2,600 Twitter followers in 2009, 570,000 followers in 2012, 1.97 million by 2015 (compared then to Maduro's 2.35 million), and more than 3 million in 2021.
Bocaranda's Twitter was hacked in 2016 and the hackers used the account to Tweet that Bocaranda acknowledged being a US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) puppet.
Responses
In response to Bocaranda reporting June 2009 rumors that BBVA Provincial would be sold, El País published that the "Venezuelan branch of BBVA today denied ... the 'irresponsible' rumors spread by journalist Nelson Bocaranda, on his radio program Runrunes", adding that "this information has already been denied both in the Runrunes program" and by another agency that reported it.
The Venezuelan Instituto Prensa y Sociedad (IPYS – Press and Society Institute) issued a report in 2013 on pressure directed by the judicial system at journalists who were critical of the government, listing as one of the cases a court summons to Bocaranda after he revealed the cancer diagnosis of Chávez which stated that Bocaranda had been "associated with acts of violence after the April 14 elections".
Bocaranda was described in 2011 and 2012 Wall Street Journal articles as a "prominent" and "respected Venezuelan columnist". In 2015, the Spanish newspaper Ideal described Bocaranda as a "veteran" and "the most popular journalist in Venezuela", citing his Twitter followers, adding that "different spheres of the Venezuelan government" said Bocaranda worked for the CIA due to his reports on Chávez's illness; the allegations have never been substantiated.
Awards
Bocaranda received various awards in Venezuela. He was awarded the Municipal Prize in Journalism in 1965 and 1967. He was awarded the National Prize of Journalism from the Fundación Premio Nacional de Periodismo (National Journalism Award Foundation) in 1985, and the Monseñor Pellín [es] Award from the Episcopal Conference of Venezuela, recognized in the latter's Person of the Year category in 2019.
Publications
- El Poder de los Secretos (2015) with Diego Arroyo Gil, Planeta de Venezuela, ISBN 978-9802715480
References
- ^ Gil_Guzmán 1994, p. 132.
- ^ Acosta-Alzuru 2016, p. 138.
- ^ Socorro, Milagros [es] (4 August 2012). "Por cierto… Autobiografía de Nelson Bocaranda, recogida por Milagros Socorro" . milagrossocorro.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 August 2023.
- ^ "Nelson Bocaranda". Venevisión. 3 August 2001. Archived from the original on 3 August 2001. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
- "Nelson Bocaranda: 'Nada quiere tener problemas con el gobierno'" [Nelson Bocaranda: No one wants to have problems with the government]. producto.com.ve (in Spanish). 31 July 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
- ^ "Venezuelan Press: Nelson Bocaranda". Venezuelan Press (in European Spanish). Retrieved 19 July 2023.
- ^ "Nelson Bocaranda vuelve delante de las cámaras" [Nelson Bocaranda returns in front of the cameras] (in Spanish). El Estímulo. 9 July 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- Martinez, Tomas Eloy (26 September 1996). "Latin America's crime wave". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. p. 11B.
Fine Brazilian magazines such as Veja or Isto E, as well as TV programs with mass audiences – for example, those hosted by Mariano Grondona in Buenos Aires or Nelson Bocaranda in Caracas – are devoting their front pages or prime-time broadcasts to these topics.
- ^ Cawthorne, Andrew (8 March 2012). "Venezuelan journalist in eye of Chavez cancer storm". Reuters. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
With a daily drip-drip of rumors and details about Chavez's condition, the openly pro-opposition Bocaranda has garnered more than 670,000 followers ... Bocaranda's investigative work on Chavez's health has brought him more fame than at any point in a half-century media career spanning back to when he was 16
- Mazotte, Natalia (14 March 2012). "Opposition journalist in Venezuela alleges plot to damage his reputation". LatAm Journalism Review by the Knight Center. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
- ^ Barrera, Javier F. (20 June 2015). "'En Venezuela se ha restringido la libertad y con Twitter hemos crecido'" ['En Venezuela liberty has been restricted and with Twitter we have grown']. Ideal (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 August 2023.
... uno de los periodistas venezolanos más populares de su país, crítico con los gobiernos de Chávez y Maduro ... Es el periodista más popular en Venezuela, con 1,97 millones de seguidores en Twitter ... A sus 70 años, este veterano periodista vive en la cresta de la ola de su carrera profesional, ya que fue el primero en informar Hugo Chávez, se encontraba en enfermo. Esto provocó que desde diferentes esferas del gobierno venezolano se le acusara de trabajar para la CIA, algo que nunca se pudo demostrar. Fue crítico con Chávez y lo es con su sucesor, Nicolás Maduro.
Hugo Chávez was ill. This caused different spheres of the Venezuelan government to accuse him of working for the CIA, something that could never be proven. He was critical of Chávez and is critical of his successor, Nicolás Maduro. - ^ Primera, Maye (26 June 2014). "Venezuela's journalists migrate online to escape government censorship". El País. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- ^ Abanhassan, Janan; Cañizález, Andrés (2016). "Nelson Bocaranda Sardi como líder de la opinión pública en Venezuela" [Nelson Bocaranda Sardi as leader of public opinion in Venezuela] (PDF). Comunicación: estudios venezolanos de comunicación (in Spanish) (174): 13–19. ISSN 0798-1856.
... portal web del periodista Nelson Bocaranda Sardi nace por un hecho de censura que sufre dicho periodista, y se ve en la obligación de salir del aire con su programa radial Runrunes ... es un líder en la opinión pública venezolana por convertirse en el vocero de la verdad, por difundir las informaciones bajo sustento investigativo y por poseer confianza y credibilidad en la sociedad venezolana.
- ^ "Bocaranda: 'no digo mentiras' sobre la salud de Chávez" [Bocaranda: 'I don't tell lies' about Chávez's health]. BBC Mundo (in Spanish). 21 March 2012. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
A los 66 años, el reconocido periodista venezolano Nelson Bocaranda ... Es así que su cuenta en Twitter, donde tiene más de 570.000 seguidores, se ha convertido en lectura obligada, especialmente luego de que el mes pasado lanzara la primicia sobre el nuevo viaje a La Habana de Chávez por la recurrencia del cáncer. Bocaranda dio la información, las autoridades lo desmintieron y al día siguiente Chávez, quien a los 57 años buscará en las elecciones de octubre un tercer mandato, lo confirmó.
he released the scoop on Chavez's new trip to Havana for the recurrence of cancer. Bocaranda gave the information, the authorities denied it and the next day Chávez, who at the age of 57 will seek a third term in the October elections, confirmed it. - ^ Forero, Juan (17 March 2012). "Venezuelans flock to columnist for news on Chavez cancer". The Washington Post. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
In June, he was the first to reveal that Chavez had cancer, which the president confirmed days later in a dramatic televised speech. Then, in the early morning hours of Feb. 20, Bocaranda issued a series of tweets reporting a recurrence of cancer, which Chavez confirmed the next day. That last scoop generated 80,000 more followers to @NelsonBocaranda, where he now has nearly 570,000 readers.
- Acosta-Alzuru 2016, pp. 136, 147.
- Acosta-Alzuru 2016, p. 149.
- Acosta-Alzuru 2016, p. 136.
- "Rompiendo el cerco informativo: Las verdades de la enfermedad del Presidente Chávez" [Breaking the information hedge: the truths of President Chávez's illness]. Runrunes (in Spanish). 25 June 2011. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
- Acosta-Alzuru 2016, pp. 148–149.
- Acosta-Alzuru 2016, pp. 138–139, 141–142.
- Puertas-Hidalgo, Rosario J.; Valdiviezo-Abad, Karen C.; Capro-Jimenez, Lilia K. (2021). "Twitter: análisis comparativo de los periodistas de Latinoamérica" [Twitter: comparative analysis of Latinamerican journalists] (PDF). Sistemas, Cibernetica e Informatica (in Spanish). 18 (1). ISSN 1690-8627.
- "El periodista venezolano Nelson Bocaranda denuncia hackeo en Twitter y robo de 2 millones de seguidores" [Venezuelan journalist Nelson Bocaranda denounces hacking on Twitter and theft of 2 million followers] (in Spanish). Univision. 7 May 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
- "La filial venezolana del BBVA desmiente los rumores de venta" [The Venezuelan subsidiary of BBVA denies rumors of sale]. El País (in Spanish). 22 June 2009. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
- Fernández, Nélida (11 August 2013). "IPYS acusa al sistema judicial de presionar a periodistas en Venezuela" [IPYS accuses the judicial system of pressuring journalists in Venezuela]. La Informacion (in Spanish). EFE. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
La directora ejecutiva del Instituto Prensa y Sociedad (IPYS) en Venezuela, Marienela Balbi, advirtió de que en este país se usa el sistema judicial para aplicar 'mecanismos sutiles' que tienen como objetivo censurar y 'asfixiar' a los medios de comunicación que mantienen una línea crítica hacia el Gobierno. ... El informe del IPYS incluye además la citación a tribunales el mes pasado al periodista Nelson Bocaranda, conocido dentro y fuera del país por haber dado reportes no oficiales sobre la salud del fallecido presidente Hugo Chávez y a quien el Gobierno asoció a los hechos de violencia tras las elecciones del 14 de abril.
[The executive director of the Press and Society Institute (IPYS) in Venezuela, Marienela Balbi, warned that in this country the judicial system is used to apply 'subtle mechanisms' that aim to censor and 'suffocate' the media that maintain a critical line towards the Government. ... The IPYS report also includes the summons to court last month of the journalist Nelson Bocaranda, known inside and outside the country for having given unofficial reports on the health of the late President Hugo Chávez and whom the Government associated with acts of violence after the April 14 elections. - Luhnow, David; Minaya, Ezequiel (30 June 2011). "Health woes cause Chávez to postpone key summit". The Wall Street Journal. p. A1.
Nelson Bocaranda, a prominent Venezuelan newspaper columnist, has reported that the cancer has spread to other organs and that the president is undergoing radiation therapy in Havana.
- Minaya, Ezequiel; de Cordoba, Jose (7 April 2012). "An ailing Chavez prays for time – Venezuela leader appeals to Christ for his life at mass; reports say he'll seek treatment in Brazil". The Wall Street Journal. p. A11.
Still, Nelson Bocaranda, a respected Venezuelan columnist ... Last June, Mr. Bocaranda was the first journalist to say that Mr. Chavez had been operated on for cancer in Cuba. In February, Mr. Bocaranda was the first to say that Mr. Chavez' cancer had returned and he would undergo another operation in Cuba.
- ^ Salomón, Luisa (17 October 2019). "Prodavinci recibió el Premio Monseñor Pellín 2019 al Reportaje Web del año" [Prodavinci received the Monsignor Pellín 2019 Award for Web Report of the Year]. Prodavinci (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 July 2023.
Book sources
- Acosta-Alzuru, Carolina (2016). "No News is Bad News: Examining the Discourse Around Hugo Chávez's Illness". In Vemula, R.; Gavaravarapu, S. (eds.). Health Communication in the Changing Media Landscape. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 135–157. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-33539-1_8. ISBN 978-3319815404.
- Gil Guzmán, Rosamelia (1994). Figuras sobresalientes de la comunicación social: un perfil de ejemplaridad de los comunicadores [Outstanding figures of social communication: an exemplary profile of communicators] (in Spanish). Universidad Católica Andrés Bello.