NYWIFT Blog

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Karen “Dr.K” Baptiste

By Ana Juanola

Welcome to NYWIFT, Karen “Dr.K” Baptiste!

Karen “Dr. K” Baptiste is an investigative journalist and media storyteller whose work explores the intersections of race, education, and the criminal legal system. She is an Emmy® award-winning filmmaker of the documentary Preschool to Prison, and also works as a speaker, leadership wellness coach, and organizational strategist.

Her work centers lived experience, elevating voices that are often overlooked while connecting personal narratives to broader systems of accountability. Dr. K brings a rigorous, human-centered approach to storytelling that is grounded in care, amplification, and long-term generational impact.

Originally from the Bronx, she collaborates with mission-driven organizations, creatives, and community leaders across the country to support storytelling and leadership practices that foster meaningful change.

NYWIFT Member Karen “Dr.K” Baptiste

 

Could you give our readers a brief introduction to yourself?

I’m an investigative journalist and media storyteller focused on the real-life consequences of policy, especially where race, gender, education, and the criminal legal system intersect. My work centers on the people most impacted, elevating voices that are often ignored, dismissed, or reduced to statistics.

I’m also the founder of Pioneering Possibilities and Company, a consultancy that supports executive and senior leaders in building workplaces where their employees experience joy and effectiveness. At the core of everything I do is a commitment to dignity: telling complex stories with rigor, care, and humanity.

 

What brought you to NYWIFT?

I came to NYWIFT because I wanted to be part of a community of professionals who take craft seriously and believe in opening doors, especially in a field where access and opportunity can be uneven. I was looking for mentorship, collaboration, and a network that understands what it takes to build a sustainable media career while also doing work with stakes.

NYWIFT felt like a place where I could learn, contribute, and connect with women who are actively shaping the industry with integrity.

 

 

What is a lesson you learned the hard way in your career that you wish you had known earlier?

One lesson I learned the hard way is that talent and hard work aren’t always enough. You also need relationships, guidance, and advocacy. I wish I had understood the difference between a mentor and a sponsor earlier. A mentor helps you grow; a sponsor uses their influence to vouch for you when you’re not in the room.

Building those relationships intentionally isn’t transactional; it’s professional care. If I had the right community, I would have been able to shorten my learning curve, navigate politics, and protect my confidence when the work got hard. I also learned not to wait until you “feel ready” to ask for support. Ask sooner.

 

68th Annual New York Emmy Awards

 

Your project Preschool to Prison exposes the intersections of race, education, and the criminal legal system. What inspired you to begin this work?

This project is personal. My brother was sent to a prison directly across the street from his high school, and I watched what that did to him and how his mental health deteriorated in real time. He’s alive, but he will never be the same, and our family won’t be either. That experience changed how I see systems and how early the pipeline begins.

Later, when I visited schools, I saw practices that were heartbreaking: adults using humiliation, harsh punishment, and dismissal instead of care and accountability. Children’s emotions were treated like inconveniences, like their experiences didn’t count because they were “just kids.” But kids are full humans. When their pain is minimized, it often manifests as behavior, and too many schools respond by punishing minor infractions rather than supporting growth.

Preschool to Prison exists to document what I’ve witnessed, connect the dots, and push us to confront how we normalize harm, especially when it happens to children.

 

As an investigative journalist and media storyteller, how do you balance emotional truth with journalistic responsibility?

For me, emotional truth and journalistic responsibility aren’t opposites; they’re partners. Emotional truth means honoring what people lived through and how it felt, without sensationalizing their pain. Journalistic responsibility means verifying, contextualizing, and being precise about what I can prove and what I’m interpreting.

My approach is to lead with humanity and back it with rigor: I interview with care, I fact-check aggressively, and I’m transparent about what I know and how I know it. I avoid reducing people to their worst moment or their trauma.

When the story includes harm, I’m thoughtful about what I include, what I leave out, and how the audience might consume it. The goal isn’t to shock; it’s to reveal, clarify, and move people toward accountability and change.

 

 

What has been one of the most challenging or eye-opening moments in your reporting so far?

One of the most challenging and eye-opening parts of this work is watching how quickly harm becomes “normal” inside institutions and organizations, especially when the people harmed are children or underrepresented groups. I’ve sat with stories where a child’s distress was treated as defiance, where a cry for help turned into discipline, and where the adults in charge didn’t see themselves as causing damage because “that’s just how things are done.” 

In both corporate and nonprofit organizations, I’ve seen how adults’ needs and humanity can get minimized, too. People are expected to perform through burnout, bureaucracy, and unspoken rules that reward compliance over care. Over time, that normalization can make harmful practices feel “professional,” even when they’re quietly eroding trust, creativity, and mental health. It’s also been eye-opening to see how many people want change privately but feel powerless publicly. 

What keeps me going is the clarity that storytelling can disrupt that normalization. When you document patterns, connect lived experience to policy, and refuse to look away, it becomes harder for systems to hide behind language like “protocol” or “safety.” Real people are living with the consequences.

 

Looking ahead, what impact do you hope your work will have on communities and systems of change?

I want my work to help communities name what’s happening, feel less alone, and have language and evidence to demand something better. I hope it influences leaders and decision-makers to understand that policy isn’t abstract: every choice creates outcomes for real people, and those outcomes accumulate across generations.

I also hope it pushes a broader redefinition of leadership: leadership as listening, accountability, and repair, not just authority. We need leaders who can sit with complexity and build environments where differences are treated as strengths, not threats. And I want my storytelling to support an approach to change that’s proactive, not reactive, so we stop waiting for a crisis to justify care.

 

Connect with Dr. K on Instagram at @dr.kworld, on her website www.drkworld.com and check out the latest on her film Preschool to Prison @preschooltoprisondoc and www.preschooltoprisondocumentary.com.

To learn more about her Pioneering Possibilities and Company please visit https://www.pioneeringpossibilities.com/.

(All photos courtesy of  Karen “Dr.K” Baptiste)

PUBLISHED BY

Ana Juanola

Ana Juanola Ana Juanola is a Mexican filmmaker and producer focused on developing and producing culturally resonant, character driven stories from unexpected perspectives. Her work spans short films, music videos, and commercial projects, with production experience across major creative hubs including New York, Mexico, and California. She brings a strong editorial sensibility and a deep commitment to socially conscious storytelling.

View all posts by Ana Juanola

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