Patrick Range McDonald is a best-selling author, award-winning journalist, and housing justice activist based in Los Angeles, California, USA. He has dedicated his career to holding the powerful accountable and giving voice to the voiceless. Through his longtime work and extensive traveling around the world, McDonald holds a unique understanding of how the powerful operate. It informs, one way or another, all his writing.
As an investigative reporter at L.A. Weekly, McDonald earned numerous awards, including “Best News Feature” and “Journalist of the Year” from the Los Angeles Press Club and the national “Public Service” award from the Association of Alternative Newsmedia. The “Public Service” award was given to McDonald for a major exposé that played a key role in restoring funding for the Los Angeles Public Library system.
As an author, McDonald co-wrote Los Angeles Mayor Richard J. Riordan’s memoir, The Mayor: How I Turned Around Los Angeles After Riots, an Earthquake and the O.J. Simpson Murder Trial. With a foreword by President Bill Clinton, the book was a New York Times and Los Angeles Times best seller.
McDonald also wrote Righteous Rebels: AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Crusade to Change the World. It tells the inspiring, untold story of AIDS Healthcare Foundation, the world’s largest HIV/AIDS medical-care nonprofit. AHF works in more than 40 countries and has saved millions of lives around the globe.
In a rave review, The Lancet, the prestigious medical journal, wrote: “McDonald has managed a deft balancing act with this book: on one hand providing a fascinating inside view of a billion-dollar non-profit organization, while on the other hand providing a history of both the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and the AIDS crisis, full of human interest and compelling portraits of the major players in the organization. However, this book was written with a larger purpose in mind: to inspire readers to take action and to provide a ‘blueprint for how anyone can absolutely change the world.'”
McDonald was the historical consultant for the documentary Keeping the Promise: AHF 30 Years, narrated by Oscar-winning actress Meryl Streep.
He is currently the advocacy journalist for Housing Is A Human Right, one of the leading housing justice organizations in the United States and the housing advocacy division of AHF. For his work, McDonald received the “Best Activism Journalism” award from the Los Angeles Press Club for an investigation into L.A.’s gentrification crisis. He also wrote a short book, Selling Off California: The Untold Story. It examines the powerful alliances and devastating policies that fuel the housing affordability and homelessness crises in California. The book was a finalist for a Los Angeles Press Club award.
McDonald has also worked on three ballot measures to end statewide rent control restrictions in California, writing numerous articles and exposés about corporate landlords and the real estate industry’s destructive, greed-driven housing agenda.
He has written for Politico magazine, The Advocate, New Times – LA, New York Press, and Westchester County Weekly, among other publications.
In 2023, McDonald founded ‘Letters From Over Here,’ a media movement. He can be followed on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. McDonald’s writing is “Proudly AI-Free.”(TM)