Junne Alcantara

Washington, D.C.

Designer, developer, animator and art director

Education: Louisiana State University, B.A. in Communication

Junne Alcantara is a design editor with a focus on news development and visual enterprise storytelling.
Latest from Junne Alcantara

    The Washington Post design department is hiring

    Learn more about our award-winning visual journalists

    April 22, 2022

      Beijing Olympics medal count

      See the latest medal standings for the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

      February 3, 2022

        The Washington Post design team is hiring

        Learn more about our award-winning visual journalists, and check back here for available postings

        July 28, 2021
        • Perspective

        Grief, anger and fear envelop Atlanta’s Asian American community

        Photographer Hannah Yoon chronicles the aftermath of a mass shooting.

        March 25, 2021
        Yoo Jeong Lee kneels to pay respects at a memorial outside Gold Spa in Atlanta.

        A year of the pandemic: Sorrow, stamina, defiance, despair

        For most Americans, March 11 was the day the coronavirus crisis first became real. Fifty-two weeks later, millions have fallen ill and millions more have been vaccinated. More than 525,000 are dead. This timeline tells the story of a singular period in history.

        March 11, 2021

          Everything, all at once: The stories of 2020

          How The Washington Post covered a year like no other

          December 23, 2020

          Coronavirus pandemic hits a grim new milestone: 1 million dead

          From the first wave in February in China through New York City’s April catastrophe and on to India’s current surge, the coronavirus has unleashed a worldwide suffering with no evident exit.

          September 28, 2020
          Coffins from Italy's Bergamo region are received at the Cinisello Balsamo cemetery, near Milan, on March 27.

            They depended on their parents for everything. Then the virus took both.

            Now the Ismael kids — 13, 18, and 20 — are struggling to cope with grief, but also with how to keep a car running, pay bills, be a family

            July 20, 2020
            Nash, Nadeen and Nanssy visit their parents' graves on Father's Day.

            ‘I wanted to show the pain that I was feeling’: Why protesters are standing up for George Floyd

            People from across the country are showing up to protest George Floyd’s death. We talked to protesters about why this movement matters to them.

            June 4, 2020