Julian Rubinstein

Julian Rubinstein December 27, 1968 is an American journalist, documentary filmmaker and educator. He is best known for his longform magazine journalism and his non-fiction books, Ballad of the Whiskey Robber, which chronicles the life of one of the world's most popular living folk heroes and The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood, a multi-generational story of activism and gang violence in a gentrifying northeast Denver community. While reporting The Holly, he began directing and producing THE HOLLY, a feature length documentary, which captures significant problems in a federal anti-gang effort and the targeted takedown of an activist.

Early life
Rubinstein was born in 1968 in the Bronx. He is the son of David Rubinstein, a psychiatrist and medical director, and Diane Rubinstein, an aerospace engineer. The family moved to Denver from New York City in 1970 when David Rubinstein accepted a residency at the University of Colorado Medical School. Soon afterward, Dr. Rubinstein was drafted into the Air Force and became the base psychiatrist at Denver's now-closed Lowry Air Force Base, retiring as a major. Dr. Rubinstein was an attending at several Denver-area hospitals. At age 49, he was diagnosed with cancer and became known posthumously for his work counseling residents at Hospice of Metro Denver who didn't know he too was dying. Diane Rubinstein worked much of her career on government contracts, including missile defense, and retired from Raytheon.

After living in Denver for several years and Pueblo for a year while Dr. Rubinstein worked at the state mental hospital, the family moved to south Denver, where Julian Rubinstein attended Cherry Creek High School. He went on to receive a B.A. in Political Science from Emory University in 1991 and an M.S. in Journalism from Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, in 1992.

Rubinstein's younger brother, Dan Rubinstein, is the elected district attorney in Mesa County, Colorado.

Career
Rubinstein began his career as an agate clerk in the Washington Post Sports section, and wrote for the Sports and Style section, where he did music reviews and features. In 1994, he was hired as a reporter at Sports Illustrated, where he worked for four years, covering tennis, NFL, NBA and extreme sports. In 1996, he worked with senior writer Gary Smith on "Crime and Punishment: The Saga of Richie Parker, which won the 1997 National Magazine Award for Feature Writing. In 1998, Rubinstein went to work for CBS Sports at the Nagano Winter Olympics as the co-editor-in-chief of a daily  publication.

Afterward, Rubinstein became a freelance journalist, making a name as a reporter who was able to find overlooked or mistold stories, and land difficult interviews. His story, "They Call It Suicide", published in Rolling Stone in 2000, was reported over several weeks in Mato Grosso do Sul in which he gained the trust of a Guarani Indian tribe fleeing the reservation in fear of its chief. International news stories reported that the tribe had the highest suicide rate in the world, but Rubinstein discovered evidence that the chief was murdering his own people.

Rubinstein wrote what has been called the best profile of tennis player John McEnroe. The unabridged version of the profile appeared on the literary sports journalism site, SportsJones.com and espn.com, and an abridged version of the story was published in The New York Times Magazine in 2000. Rubinstein also chronicled the Hells Angels war with a rival biker gang, the Rock Machine, in Canada, and profiled the Hasidic international ecstasy kingpin, Jacob "Cookie" Orgad, a story selected for Best American Crime Writing.

In 2004, Rubinstein published his first non-fiction book Ballad of the Whiskey Robber, about the Hungarian bank robber and folk hero Attila Ambrus. The book was published in six languages and was a number one bestseller in Hungary. In the U.S., it was the winner of Borders' 2005 "Original Voices" Non-fiction Book of the Year and was a finalist for the 2005 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Fact Crime book and the 2005 Anthony Award for best Non-fiction book. A cabaret-style recording of the book was a finalist for the 2007 Audie Awards for Best Audio Book. The recording stars Eric Bogosian, Demetri Martin, former U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power, Gary Shteyngart, Jonathan Ames, Arthur Phillips, Darin Strauss, and Tommy Ramone. Warner Bros. and Johnny Depp optioned the book for a film.

In 2013, Rubinstein's story "Operation Easter" appeared in the New Yorker for which Rubinstein gained access to illegal egg collectors in the U.K. The story was named one of the "5 Most Entertaining Stories of the Year" by Longreads, and was listed as a Notable story of the Year by Best American Science and Nature Writing. In 2006, he wrote about his relationship with his father, David Rubinstein, in 5280, Denver's city magazine, which was cited as a Notable Story in 2007 Best American Essays.

In 2021, after seven years of work, his book, The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood was released to critical acclaim. In a starred review, Booklist called it "a shattering piece of investigative journalism involving street gangs, race relations and law enforcement." The New York Times Book Review named it an Editors' Choice, writing that it "expos[ed] the state surveillance, the crooked policing, the structural racism, the poverty, and the broken promises that had plagued the Holly for decades." Rubinstein appeared on NPR's All Things Considered with Michel Martin. The book was the winner of the 2022 Colorado Book Award for general nonfiction and the winner of the 2022 High Plains Book Award for Creative Nonfiction.

The Holly documentary
In 2022, a rough cut of the documentary Rubinstein began filming while reporting The Holly was shown to Academy Award-winner Adam McKay, who told Deadline.com that he was "completely blown away," and offered to come on as an Executive Producer. The film premiered at Telluride Mountainfilm in May 2022 and won the Audience Choice Award. It went on to win the 2023 IRE (Investigative Reporters and Editors) Award for Best Documentary. Because of the project's implication of wealthy and influential people and entities in Denver and their connection to street violence in a gentrifying community, Rubinstein faced threats and falsehoods about the work and had to leave Denver for his safety in 2021 and 2022. The Denver Gazette wrote that Rubinstein's film was "a documentary that the most powerful people in Denver don't want to see and don't want you to see," calling to project "Denver's very own Bonfire of the Vanities." The film continued to win awards at film festivals and was acquired by Gravitas Ventures, which released the film theatrically in March, 2023. Due to continued threats on his life, Rubinstein was placed in a Colorado state protection program. The film and book were also sued by two self-identifying gang members, though the case was withdrawn with prejudice after the plaintiffs admitted that they had not read the book or seen the film. The film became a case study in the documentary community for how to withstand threats, falsehoods and legal challenges and was featured at the 2023 Double Exposure Investigative Film Festival in Washington DC.

Colorado College and the University of Denver's Media, Film and Journalism Studies Department partnered to present Rubinstein in conversation with Pulitzer Prize-winner Wesley Lowery in an event called "Battle for Truth." The Sentinel of Aurora, where Elijah McClain was killed and where Denver's gang violence has spilled into, called the film "a riveting look at metro police, gang violence and politics."

Personal life
Rubinstein worked as an adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University, and also as a senior producer for the school's Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. In 2021, he was named a Visiting Professor of the Practice in Documentary Journalism at the University of Denver. In 2023, he was named Visiting Filmmaker and Journalist at Western Colorado University. Rubinstein worked with at-risk youth at Groundwork in Brooklyn, and at Friends For Youth in Colorado. His mentee Ngor Monday was killed in a shootout in 2019.

Awards

 * 2023 Winner, THE HOLLY, IRE (Investigative Reporters and Editors) Award, Best Documentary
 * 2022 Winner, THE HOLLY, Audience Award, Best Documentary, Denver Film Festival
 * 2022 Winner, THE HOLLY, Jury Prize, Best Documentary, Santa Fe International Film Festival
 * 2022 Winner, THE HOLLY, Audience Choice Award, Telluride Mountainfilm Festival
 * 2022 Winner, The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood, High Plains Book Award for Creative Nonfiction
 * 2022 Winner, The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood, Colorado Book Award for General Nonfiction,
 * 2021 New York Times Editors' Choice, The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood
 * 2021 Booklist Editors' Choice: Best of 2021,The Holly: Five Bullets One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood
 * 2014 Best American Science and Nature Writing, Notable Story of the Year, "Operation Easter," New Yorker
 * 2013 Best of Longform, 5 Most Entertaining Stories of the Year, "Operation Easter," New Yorker
 * 2009 Lowell Thomas Travel Writing Award, Bronze Medal, "Aspen," Travel + Leisure
 * 2007 Best American Essays, Notable Story of the Year, "Final Cut," 5280
 * 2005 Winner, Borders "Original Voices" Best Non-fiction Book of the Year, Winner, Ballad of the Whiskey Robber
 * 2002 Best American Crime Writing, Official Selection, "X-Files," Details''
 * 2002 Best American Sports Writing, Notable Story of the Year, "Being John McEnroe," espn.com / New York Times Magazine
 * 2000 Women's Sports Foundation, Best Journalism, "Slam It Baby," Salon.com
 * 1999 Best American Sports Writing, Notable Story of the Year, "The Chosen One," Gear

Books

 * Rubinstein, Julian (2009). "Leaving Home." Published in Writing Away From Home, International Authors In Brussels, cahier, het beschrijf, pp 141–145.
 * Rubinstein, Julian (2021). The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood.
 * Rubinstein, Julian (2021). The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood.

Film
THE HOLLY (2022).

Articles

 * Rubinstein, Julian (January 27, 2000). "Being John McEnroe." The New York Times Magazine
 * Rubinstein, Julian (June 8, 2000). "They Call It Suicide." Rolling Stone
 * Rubinstein, Julian (September, 2001.) "X-Files." Details
 * Rubinstein, Julian (September, 2001.) "X-Files." Details