Margaret Sullivan (journalist)

Margaret M. Sullivan is an American journalist who is the media columnist for The Washington Post. She was the fifth public editor of The New York Times and the first woman to hold the position. In that role, she reported directly to Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. as the "readers' representative". She began her tenure on September 1, 2012, joining The New York Times from The Buffalo News, where she had been editor and vice-president. Her first column in The Washington Post ran on May 22, 2016.

Margaret M. Sullivan
Sullivan in 2016
Born
NationalityAmerican
EducationGeorgetown University
Northwestern University
OccupationMedia columnist for The Washington Post
Former Public Editor of The New York Times
Former editor of The Buffalo News

Biography

Sullivan is a native of Lackawanna, New York and a graduate of Georgetown University.[1] She also holds an M.S.J. from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.[2] Sullivan joined the Buffalo Times in 1980 as a summer intern, becoming the paper’s first female editor in 1999.[3]

Sullivan was appointed to the Pulitzer Prize Board in 2011 and has been a juror several times and has served as the chairwoman of the commentary jury in 2006. She has been elected a director of the American Society of News Editors and led its First Amendment committee.[4] Sullivan is also the author of Ghosting the News: Local Journalism and the Crisis of American Democracy, which was published by Columbia Global Reports in 2020.[5]

Career

The Buffalo News

Sullivan was the first woman to serve as the editor and as the managing editor of The Buffalo News, the largest newspaper in Western New York, after previously working as a reporter and columnist. Sullivan focused The Buffalo News's reporting on poverty, economic development and inequities in public education as well as establishing its first investigative team.[4]

The New York Times

In The New York Times announcement on July 16, 2012, former executive editor Jill Abramson said, “Margaret has exactly the right experience to assume this critical role for us at this time. She has an impressive 32-year background in print journalism where she has distinguished herself as a reporter, columnist, editor and manager. And critically for us at this time, she has shown adeptness at embracing new platforms and engaging and interacting with readers in real time online, in print and in person.”[2] Unlike previous public editors of The New York Times, Sullivan signed on for four years.[2]

In December 2015, Sullivan announced that she was not renewing her contract with The Times. Sullivan stated that "The role really requires an outsider's perspective, so I've thought all along that having a clear time limit serves The Times and its readers best."[6]

Her tenure was celebrated by both journalists and readers. "Her tenure accomplished many things, most importantly the potential of web-based media reporting and criticism to combat the media establishment’s groupthink," Eric Alterman observed.[7]

Washington Post

In February 2016, it was announced that when Sullivan left The Times, she would be joining The Washington Post as its media columnist.[8] Arthur Sulzberger Jr., The Times’s publisher praised Sullivan in a memo to staff stating that she had “ushered the position into a new age.” Her first column in The Washington Post ran on May 22, 2016.

Awards

In 2020, Sullivan was awarded the Mirror Award for her Post article on the Media Coverage of the Trump Impeachment.[9][10]

gollark: Even `for i in range(2**32): pass` is slow in Python and I don't know why.
gollark: But this is an esolang, so I doubt it's very efficiently implemented, and this might be doing some sort of inefficient stuff itself.
gollark: I mean, 2^32 is actually within tractable computation range for modern computers (it's 2 billion or so, and my laptop can probably manage 8GIPS (giga-instructions per second) sequentially).
gollark: This is the problem - with ones which are too long they can't be really tested.
gollark: In decently general-purpose programming languages with access to more space, you can construct ridiculously large numbers by implementing ↑ and all that.

References

  1. Paul, Pamela (7 September 2014). "Margaret Sullivan: By the Book". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  2. Pompeo, Joe. "'New York Times' names new public editor". capitalnewyork.com. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  3. https://www.poynter.org/reporting-editing/2012/margaret-m-sullivan-to-be-next-new-york-times-public-editor/
  4. "About The Public Editor". The New York Times. Retrieved September 2, 2015.
  5. "Ghosting the News". Columbia Global Reports. Retrieved 2020-08-11.
  6. Mullin, Benjamin (December 19, 2015). "NYT Public Editor Margaret Sullivan will depart in 2016". Poynter.org. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  7. Alterman, Eric (2017-04-24). "Margaret Sullivan Made 'The New York Times' Better—and We All Benefited". The Nation.
  8. Ember, Sydney (February 22, 2016). "Margaret Sullivan, New York Times Public Editor, Joining Washington Post". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  9. Loughlin, Wendy S. (June 12, 2020). "Newhouse School Announces Winners in the 2020 Mirror Awards Competition". SU News. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  10. Sullivan, Margaret (December 21, 2019). "Perspective: The two big flaws of the media's impeachment coverage — and what went right". Washington Post. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
Media offices
Preceded by
Arthur S. Brisbane
Public Editor for The New York Times
2012-2016
Succeeded by
Liz Spayd
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