Robert Zelnick

Carl Robert Zelnick (August 9, 1940 – September 23, 2019) was an American journalist, author and professor of journalism at the Boston University College of Communication, and winner of two Emmy Awards and two Gavel Awards.[1][2][3]

Robert Zelnick
Born
Carl Robert Zelnick

(1940-08-09)August 9, 1940
DiedSeptember 23, 2019(2019-09-23) (aged 79)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation
Known forExecutive editor, Frost–Nixon interviews

Career

Early in his career, Zelnick worked for The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, and the Anchorage Daily News, and was executive editor of the Frost–Nixon interviews.[3] (In the 2008 film Frost/Nixon, Zelnick is portrayed by Oliver Platt.)

He was a correspondent for ABC News for more than 20 years. His assignments included national political and congressional affairs (1994–98), the Pentagon (1986–94), Israel (1984–86) and Moscow (1982–84).[3]

In 1998, he began teaching at Boston University, where he chaired the journalism department from 2002 to 2006.[4]

He was a research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.[5]

Life

Zelnick was convicted in 2013[6] of misdemeanor negligent motor vehicle homicide and the civil infraction of failure to yield for an incident in October 2011, when he struck and killed a motorcyclist in Plymouth, Massachusetts.[7]

Books

  • The Illusion of Net Neutrality: Political Alarmism, Regulatory Creep, and the Real End to Internet Freedom (2013), coauthored with his daughter, Eva Zelnick
  • Israel's Unilateralism: Beyond Gaza (2006)
  • Swing Dance: Justice O'Connor and the Michigan Muddle (2004)
  • Winning Florida: How the Bush Team Fought the Battle (2001)
  • Gore: A Political Life (2000)
  • Backfire: A Reporter's Look at Affirmative Action (1996)
gollark: Increased use of privacy-preserving tools makes them cheaper and less private ones more expensive, increases the social acceptability of private tools, and makes it more expensive to do spying.
gollark: actually, it does.
gollark: You can just do *some* privacy-benefiting stuff but not go full something or other.
gollark: You could say it about lots of things. Dealing with dangerous dangers is sensible as long as the cost isn't more than, er, chance of bad thing times badness of bad thing.
gollark: Probably.

References


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