Walter Shapiro

Walter Shapiro is an American journalist, writer and columnist.

Early life and education

Shapiro was born in New York City and was raised in Norwalk, Connecticut.[1] He graduated from Brien McMahon High School in 1965.[1]

Shapiro attended the University of Michigan, where he was an editor of The Michigan Daily; he earned his B.A. in history in 1970.[1] Shapiro completed post-graduate work at the university in European history; as a graduate student, he unsuccessfully ran for the U.S. House of Representatives, finishing second in a six-way Democratic primary election.[1]

Career

Shapiro began his journalism career as Washington reporter for Congressional Quarterly (1969 to 1970).[1] He has since written for a number of publications, including USA Today (serving as twice-weekly "Hype & Glory" columnist starting in 1995; The Washington Post, Time (senior writer from 1987 to 1993, covering Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign), Newsweek (political writer, 1983 to 1987), Esquire (monthly "Our Man in the White House" column, 1993 to 1996), the Washington Monthly (editor, 1972 to 1976), Salon.com, and Politics Daily.[1][2] Shapiro has also written for The American Prospect[3] and been a columnist for Yahoo News[4] and Roll Call.[5] Shapiro won the Society of Professional Journalists' 2010 Sigma Delta Chi Award in the category of Online Column Writing (Independent) for his piece "The Societal Costs of Our Shrill, Hyperactive and Partisan Media Culture," published in Politics Daily.[6]

Shapiro was press secretary to U.S. Secretary of Labor Ray Marshall from 1977 to 1978.[1] He was a speechwriter for President Jimmy Carter in 1979.[1][7][8] He has covered nine United States presidential elections.[2]

Shapiro completed a fellowship in Japan with the Japan Society and has been a member of the Council on Ideas of the Gihon Foundation since 1992.[1]

Shapiro is a fellow at New York University's Brennan Center for Justice.[2] Shapiro is also a lecturer in political science at Yale University.[4]

Shapiro has written One-Car Caravan: On the Road with the 2004 Democrats Before America Tunes In (PublicAffairs, 2003) and Hustling Hitler: How a Jewish Vaudevillian Fooled the Fuhrer (Blue Rider Press, 2016).[2][1]

Shapiro performed stand-up comedy for many years, and in 1998 The Times of London described him as "one of Manhattan's leading political satirists."[9] His columns have included satire as well.[10]

Personal life

Shapiro is married to magazine writer Meryl Gordon and splits his time between New York City and Washington, D.C.[1]

Notes

  1. Walter Shapiro biography (January 13, 2003).
  2. Experts: Walter Shapiro, Brennan Center for Justice (retrieved May 15, 2016.
  3. Authors: Walter Shapiro, The American Prospect.
  4. Walter Shapiro, Department of Political Science, Yale University.
  5. Walter Shapiro, "Clinton, Karma and the Fate of Democracy", Roll Call, November 3, 2016, p. 4.
  6. 2010 Sigma Delta Chi Award Honorees, Society of Professional Journalists.
  7. President Obama Addresses Oil From Oval Office, NPR (June 15, 2010).
  8. Bjorn F. Stillion Southard & Andrew D. Wolvinb, Jimmy Carter: A Case Study in Listening Leadership, International Journal of Listening Vol 23, Issue 2: pp. 141-152 doi:10.1080/10904010903014467.
  9. "Walter Shapiro biography", USA Today (accessed May 16, 2016).
  10. Foster, Tim. The Suburban Captivity of the Church: Contextualising the Gospel for Post-Christian Australia, p. 88 (Acorn Press, 2014).
gollark: please stop, "Familial Mediterranean Fever#8480".
gollark: I mean, it also can lead to problematic arguments which spiral out of control.
gollark: It's weird how some of them said stuff like "it'll go away after the election" as if the entire world revolves around US politics or something.
gollark: > but its fascinating to see the stupidityI was looking at some reddit subreddit about allegedly "free-thinkers resisting the new normal" and *actually* seemingly about people complaining about masks, having to isolate after positive tests, talking about herd immunity, and saying "plandemic" a bit for similar reasons; morbid curiosity or something I guess.
gollark: Electric models of what?
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