Brian van der Brug has been a staff photojournalist at the Los Angeles Times since 1997. A FAA-licensed drone pilot and videographer, Van der Brug has covered stories both international and domestic including the aftermath of war in Iraq, the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. He was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his images of the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan. Pictures of the Year International, National Press Photographers Assn., Society for News Design, Scripps Howard Foundation, the American Society of News Editors, Los Angeles Press Club and the Press Photographers of Greater Los Angeles have also recognized his work. A native Angeleno, Van der Brug was raised in San Pedro and enjoys hiking, mountain biking and is passionate about any assignment that takes him outdoors. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Cal State Long Beach.
Latest From This Author
The MS Aurora, a 70-year-old cruise ship that inspired TV’s ‘The Love Boat,’ sits abandoned in a slough outside Stockton. The ship’s demise has broken the hearts of a long line of men who could not save her.
El incendio provocó órdenes de evacuación para más de 10.000 personas ya que amenazaba estructuras en comunidades suburbanas y áreas agrícolas alrededor de Camarillo.
The fire prompted evacuation orders for more than 10,000 people as it threatened structures in suburban communities and agricultural areas around Camarillo.
Comedian Allan McLeod hosts “Walkin’ About,” a podcast that celebrates the “complex and profound” act of traveling by foot in and around Los Angeles.
Karue Sell is restarting his pro tennis career at 30 years old, and finding success with the help of a lucrative YouTube channel, brand partnerships and a 35-year-old coach. Welcome to the ATP Challenger Tour grind.
An amateur game at Manzanar to commemorate Japanese American internment during WWII coincided with the World Series opening weekend in Los Angeles.
In this big, beckoning land full of wide-open spaces, there’s almost nowhere for working people to live. More than 90 percent of the land is owned by government agencies that have little interest in making housing available for the flocks of tourists or the workers who serve them.
A longtime red California county flipped for Biden in 2020 by 14 votes. How does this purpling area view Harris vs. Trump?
The 122-foot-long-by-35-foot-tall space shuttle mockup, named the “Inspiration,” was transported via big rig in multiple parts 0.3 miles along Bellflower Boulevard from a city maintenance yard to a temporary housing location.
Will Riverside County leaders erase the zoning barrier that separates industrial warehouses from rural homes in Mead Valley? Or is this the moment that the proliferation of distribution centers slows in the Inland Empire?