Kim Masters

Kim Masters is a veteran entertainment journalist. She is an editor-at-large at The Hollywood Reporter.[1] She is also host of KCRW's weekly radio show "The Business."

Masters has served as a correspondent for NPR, contributing editor at Vanity Fair, and has written for Time, Esquire, and The Washington Post.

Books

Masters is the author of The Keys to the Kingdom: The Rise of Michael Eisner and the Fall of Everybody Else.[2][3] Entertainment Weekly gave the book a mixed review, calling it a "lacerating, 450-page takedown," but also writing that it contains "way too much inside baseball to anybody outside the New York-Los Angeles media axis."[4]

Masters and Nancy Griffin co-authored Hit & Run: How Jon Peters and Peter Guber Took Sony for a Ride in Hollywood. Publishers Weekly called the book "a shocking read that will have readers gasping at the obscene overindulgence of Hollywood."[5]

gollark: It's better if it is kept mysteriously unexplained, BEE.
gollark: In what way?
gollark: Of course, modern phone OSes can redden the screen anyway.
gollark: Okay.
gollark: Ideally get actual therapy or something.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.