Joshua is a video correspondent for the Associated Press, covering the southeastern United States and Caribbean.
For the better part of the last decade, Joshua climbed the local TV market ladder. In between many major disasters, presidential elections and the Boston Marathon explosions, Joshua broke several national stories earning "Best Reporter "and "Best Photographer" awards to boot.
Joshua was on the beach for the tar balls in 2010, when the Deepwater Horizon rig spilled million of gallons of crude oil into the gulf. His reporting exposed BP's slow response to help businesses suffering from a dip in tourism.
Recently, when 9 black worshipers attending a bible study were allegedly gunned down by a white man in a Charleston church, Joshua managed to speak with many victims' family members before any other reporter. His reports revealed that despite the heinous crime, loved ones have already forgiven the shooter.
As a bribery scandal threatens the future of FIFA, Joshua investigated one of the alleged conspirators on the island of Trinidad. While confronting former FIFA vice President Jack Warner about allegedly accepting a $10 million bribe from South Africa, Joshua dug deep to find Warner maintains power in local politics because he pays his constituents' medical and housing bills with the alleged bribe money.
Joshua has been on the front lines of disaster, most recently in knee-deep mud when historic flooding devastated parts of Texas. Joshua was on the ground in Houston for the aftermath, telling the stories of people trying to rebuild their waterlogged homes.
On top of all that, Joshua is a multi-tasking team player, completely self-reliant in the field. He pitches, shoots, edits and packages his own material and also writes the accompanying text story.
The rigorous broadcast journalism program at the University of Central Florida's Nicholson School of Communication prepared Joshua to cover major news events across the world.