Editor & Publisher

NEWSPEOPLE

New hires, promotions and relocations across the industry .....

Vickey Boyd, the longtime publisher of the Moultrie (South Carolina) News, has announced her retirement. As the publisher of the weekly paper for 20 years and a sum of 50 years with the newspaper group, Boyd and the Moultrie News became synonymous. “You realize one day 50 years goes by and you’re sitting there going, ‘Oh my gosh, how did it get to be 50 years?’” Boyd said.

Paul Farrell, group publisher of Lee Enterprise’s Southeast Region and president and publisher of the Richmond (Virginia) Times-dispatch, is retiring this summer after 42 years in the newspaper industry. In addition to The Times-dispatch, Farrell’s purview in Virginia includes The Daily Progress in Charlottesville, The Roanoke

Times, Bristol Herald Courier, News & Advance in Lynchburg, Martinsville Bulletin, Danville Register & Bee, The Free Lance-star in Fredericksburg, Culpeper Star-exponent and The News Virginian in Waynesboro. Farrell also leads Lee’s local markets in New Jersey and North Carolina.

Seung Min Kim, previously a reporter with The Washington Post, has joined The Associated Press White House team. Washington Bureau Chief Anna Johnson said: “Few journalists in the capital have a network of sources that is as deep at both the White House and on Capitol Hill, and in her new assignment, Seung Min will help us bridge that divide to deliver a more layered understanding of the complex relationship between the Biden administration and Congress.” Neil Brown, president of The Poynter Institute, and Tommie

Shelby, Caldwell Titcomb Professor of African and African American Studies and professor of philosophy at Harvard University, have been elected as co-chairs of the Pulitzer Prize Board. Brown and Shelby succeed New Yorker Contributing Editor Katherine Boo, New York Times Opinion Columnist Gail Collins and Associated Press Vice President & Editor-at-large for Standards John Daniszewski, who shared the post during the 2022 awards cycle.

Jelani Cobb will be the next dean of Columbia Journalism School, effective Aug. 1. Professor Cobb is the Ira A. Lipman Professor of Journalism and Director of the Ira A. Lipman Center for Journalism and Civil and Human Rights. He is a highly distinguished and renowned journalist and historian. Since 2012, he has worked for The New Yorker, as a contributor and staff writer, offering in-depth analyses of a wide array of subjects, ranging from electoral politics and policing to filmmaking and stand-up comedy.

Vincent Cirel has joined Gannett as chief technology officer, accelerating Gannett’s digital evolution as a data and technology subscriptionled business. Partnering with the Digital Marketing Solutions and Gannett Media business units, Cirel will drive the company’s enterprisewide technology vision and strategy, including the company’s overall cybersecurity program. He also will work closely with internal partners to ensure ongoing compliance with data privacy rules and regulations. He brings over two decades of experience, most recently as founder and managing director of Pivotal Technologies, LLC.

Bruce Siwy, who was managing editor of the Daily American in Somerset, Pennsylvania, has become an investigative reporter for the USA Today Network’s Pennsylvania state capital bureau. The Daily American is a member of Gannett’s USA Today Network. The regional executive editor for western Pennsylvania, Matt

Martin, will serve in an expanded interim role in Somerset County until a new managing editor is hired.

NPR has named its veteran reporter Juana

Summers as the newest host for its flagship afternoon news program “All Things Considered.” Summers is now a correspondent covering race, justice and politics for the network. She fills the hosting position left vacant by Audie Cornish, who departed NPR for CNN in January.

Well-known conservative commentator

Tomi Lahren has joined the Outkick team as host of the evening program “Tomi Lahren is Fearless.” Lahren has more than eight million followers on social media and her Outkick show

promises to include her usual bold takes on everything from politics to pop culture.

Emmy-winning journalist Alana Rocha has been named to lead the Rural News Network — the most ambitious collaboration to date from the Institute for Nonprofit News. As the editor, Rocha will guide the launch of the INN Rural News Network. She will work with members to identify the most compelling rural journalism across the INN Network and expand and amplify these stories through collaboration. More than 60 outlets in 30 states have already signed up to participate.

Jenny Ernsberger has been named general manager and advertising director of KPC Media. Her new role coincides with Fort Wayne Newspapers assuming ownership June 1 of The News Sun of Kendallville, The Star of Auburn, The Herald Republican of Angola and other KPC publications, including Greater Fort Wayne Business Weekly. Ernsberger previously served as advertising director of KPC Media. In her new role as general manager of the KPC Media newspapers, she will have oversight over the newspapers’ editorial staffs and circulation departments along with the advertising representatives.

Mark Lewis has been promoted to president of the Tulsa World Media Co. in Oklahoma. Before this promotion, Lewis served as the publisher and president for the Wisconn Valley Media Group in Wisconsin.

Rodrigo Tajonar has joined Boston Globe Media as chief people officer. He brings over 20 years of experience in HR and corporate affairs, supporting diverse employee groups within Global, Americas and Latin America organizations. Tajonar joined Boston Globe Media from ILC Dover, a worldleader in the design and production of engineered flexible solutions for the pharmaceutical, biopharmaceutical, aerospace and other industries, where he served as the global HR director.

Nexstar Media Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Nexstar Media Group, Inc., has named three experienced broadcast leaders to oversee the company’s media operations in Salt Lake City, Utah; Buffalo, New York; Green Bay, Wisconsin; and Marquette, Michigan. Mark Danielson will lead

KTVX-TV (ABC), KUCW-TV (CW), MTVX-TV (METV) and Abc4.com in Salt Lake City (DMA #29). Joe Abouzeid will take responsibility for overseeing WIVB-TV (CBS), WNLO-TV (CW) and wivb.com, serving Buffalo (DMA #52). Judson Beck will be responsible for Nexstar’s broadcasting and digital operations in Green Bay (DMA #68) and Marquette (DMA #182), including respectively, WFRV-TV (CBS) and Wearegreenbay.com, and WJMN-TV (IND) and Upmatters.com.

The Chicago Suntimes, the city’s oldest continuously published daily newspaper, has named Jennifer Kho as its executive editor. Kho previously served as managing editor for the Guardian US, managing editor for Huffpost, and senior director of strategic innovation at Huffpost, where she led the development of new audience engagement, storytelling and revenue models, including

membership. Kho is the first woman and first person of color to lead the Sun-times’ newsroom in the paper’s 178-year history.

PBS’ long-running nightly newscast “PBS Newshour” has found its new White House correspondent: Laura

Barrón-lópez. She was previously a White House reporter for Politico and also worked for the Washington Examiner, The Hill and Huffpost.

The Associated Press has welcomed two journalists who have joined the Business News team to cover personal finance: Adriana Morga, from

Hearst Connecticut Media Group, and Cora Lewis, former labor issues reporter at Buzzfeed. Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Meta and the longtime second in command to its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, will step down from the company this fall.

She plans to continue serving on the company’s board of directors. Meta owns Facebook, Instagram, Whatsapp and other apps. Ginger Thompson, chief of correspondents and deputy managing editor of Propublica, has been elected to the Pulitzer Prize Board. Thompson is a prize-winning journalist who has spent much of her career reporting on Latin America with a focus on investigative stories that have exposed the United States’ secret role in catastrophic episodes of the region’s recent history.

She has worked for the last eight years at Propublica where she is chief of correspondents and a deputy managing editor overseeing recruitment and retention in addition to working on reporting projects.

Former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki will soon have her own streaming show. MSNBC has announced that the show is in development for the network’s Peacock platform and is expected to launch in early 2023. MSNBC President Rashida Jones said Psaki also will appear on NBC News and MSNBC this fall, during coverage of this year’s midterm elections.

After 33 years at Tucson Weekly (Tucson, Arizona), Jim Nintzel announced that it’s time to move on to new adventures. He stepped down as executive editor of Tucson Local Media at the end of June.

Chris Stirewalt, a former top editor at Fox News who was ousted from the network following the 2020 presidential election, has been hired by Nexstar Media Group to serve as political editor for its cable news channel Newsnation.

The San Francisco Chronicle Season of Sharing Fund has promoted Kevin

Swanson to executive director. He takes on the role following the departure of Zev Lowe, who has been the executive director since October 2019. Swanson has helped lead the Season of Sharing Fund for over eight years and brings a wealth of management and communications expertise to the table. Prior to joining the Fund, he worked with the March of Dimes, Project Open Hand and ran his own consultantcy, where he worked with local, statewide and national nonprofit organizations.

The Sun Journal in Lewiston, Maine, has a new captain at the helm.

Jody Jalbert, a 34-year veteran of the Lewiston newspaper, has been promoted to the role of publisher. The move hands Jalbert leadership of the Sun Journal and the Western Maine Weeklies.

Matthew Christian is the new Savannah River Site and politics reporter for the Aiken (South Carolina) Standard. Born and schooled in West Virginia, Christian worked for a weekly newspaper in the Mountain State post-college before jumping out of journalism to attend law school at the University of South Carolina. Post-law school, Christian said he couldn’t see himself practicing law and decided to return to journalism. He joined the Morning News in Florence where he covered government and politics for four years, before being recruited to come down to Aiken.

Kyla Fraser has been named president and director of local sales and marketing for The Times and Democrat in Orangeburg, South Carolina. In this role, she will guide the local sales team as the paper continues to transition its marketing solutions beyond traditional print offerings toward an agencyfocused approach. Her primary role at The T&D for the past decade has been managing ad sales.

Forbes has promoted Kyle Vinansky to SVP of sales, North America. Vinansky will now oversee all North American sales operations — including the U.S. and Canada, reporting to Forbes’ Chief Sales and Marketing Officer Sherry Phillips. Previously Vinansky oversaw East and Midwest Sales. He has been with Forbes since 2011.

Lauren Williams has joined The Atlanta Journal-constitution where she will cover the Atlanta Hawks for the newspaper. Before joining the AJC, she was the Detroit Pistons beat reporter for Mlive. She also has worked for the New England Patriots as an editorial coordinator and covered the Detroit Lions for one season.

Siriusxm radio has tapped longtime political journalist Steve Scully to host a daytime show on its POTUS Politics channel in the time slot formerly occupied by former CNN anchor Chris Cuomo. Scully, who was senior vice president at Washington, D.C.’S Bipartisan Policy Center, is now hosting a show titled “The Briefing with Steve Scully” on weekdays from noon to 2 p.m. ET.

Sam Cholke has joined the Institute for Nonprofit News team as manager, distribution and audience growth. In this role, he will work initially on INN’S projects with Microsoft Start, Smartnews, Apple News and various other third-party platforms. Later this year, he will begin working on other strategies and programs to help INN members with their audience growth strategies.

Natasha Krasnov has joined Wirecutter as vice president of engineering. In this role, she will set the technical strategy for the growing team of engineers, software developers, managers and directors who deliver the digital experiences that users love. She joins Wirecutter from Squarespace.

D’annette Roy joins C-SPAN as the network’s new director of legal affairs and business risk management. Roy previously worked for Black News Channel, where she was the manager of standards and practices.

Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey has stepped down from Twitter’s board of directors. He had already begun to distance himself from the social media platform he co-founded, leaving Twitter’s chief executive role late last year to focus on Block, formerly known as Square.

NPR’S Senior Vice President for News and Editorial Director Nancy Barnes has announced new roles for Edith

Chapin and Terence Samuel. Chapin has been named vice president and executive editor at large, with a focus on working closely with development on fundraising initiatives related to NPR’S strategic priorities in news. Samuel will move permanently into the role of vice president and executive editor, leading NPR’S news gathering teams.

As a former reporter, editor and district manager for circulation, David Hall says he’s held almost every job in the newspaper industry. With his new position as The Daily Times’ circulation director (in Maryville, Tennessee), Hall plans to use those experiences to help strengthen relationships with customers and engage the public with the paper.

Anne Galloway, whose journalistic talent, entrepreneurial drive and commitment to public service built Vtdigger into an award-winning multimedia news and information website that has become a national model for nonprofit news, has stepped down as executive director to pursue other creative ventures. The Vermont Journalism Trust, which oversees Vtdigger, has appointed senior editor Jim Welch as interim executive director.

The San Francisco Chronicle has announced the hiring of Hannah

Hagemann as its new Weather Science Editor. In this role, a new position at The Chronicle, Hagemann will lead a team covering the weather and climate of the Bay Area. Hagemann comes to The Chronicle from Santa Cruz, where her reporting on the 2020 CZU August Lightning Complex fire for the Santa Cruz Sentinel and NPR earned awards and spurred regulatory investigations.

Pete Williams, the NBC News correspondent who mostly covered the Supreme Court and the Department of Justice for nearly 30 years, announced he will retire this month.

Amy L. Kovac-ashley has joined The Lenfest Institute as head of national programs to expand its grantmaking and support of local news around the United States. Kovac-ashley was most recently executive vice president and chief of news transformation at the American Press Institute, where her portfolio encompassed all of API’S journalism programs.

Campbell Brown, the veteran news anchor who has served as Meta’s vice president of news partnerships since 2017, has been promoted to oversee a new global media partnerships team at the company.

Semafor, the global news startup co-founded by media veterans Justin Smith and Ben Smith, has hired Liz Hoffman as its business and finance editor. Hoffman has worked for The Wall Street Journal for the past nine years.

Amanda Kludt, group publisher of Eater, Popsugar, Punch and Thrillist and Eater’s founding editor-in-chief, has announced that Stephanie Wu will be Eater’s new editor-in-chief. Eater’s GM + VP, Jill Dehnert, and its VP of Development Britt Aboutaleb, will also now work across the portfolio of lifestyle publications.

Rockell Brown Burton, an experienced academic leader and accomplished researcher with a passion for cultivating impactful, mutually beneficial relationships, has been named associate dean of inclusivity, diversity, equity and accessibility at the Newhouse

School of Public Communications at Syracuse University.

Sherri Dalphonse is the new editor of Washingtonian. She will be the first woman at the top of the masthead in the 57-year-old publication’s history and only its fifth editor ever. She has been Washingtonian’s interim editor since her predecessor, Michael

Schaffer, left for Politico at the end of last year.

Craig Nakano has been promoted to assistant managing editor for Entertainment and Arts at the Los Angeles Times, reporting to Deputy Managing Editor Julia Turner. In his new role, Nakano joins The Times masthead and will work closely with Turner to develop strategic plans for the further evolution of the newsroom’s culture coverage. In addition, Matt

Brennan, who has been with the paper since 2019, has been promoted to deputy editor, Entertainment and Arts.

Iliana Limón Romero has been named assistant managing editor for Sports at the Los Angeles Times. In her new role, she joins The Times masthead and becomes the first female sports editor in its history, and the only Latina sports editor at a major U.S. newspaper. She joined the paper as deputy sports editor in 2021.

Chris Stone, who joined the Los Angeles Times in 2020 as executive sports editor, is taking on a new role as deputy managing editor for new initiatives and vice president of LA Times Studios. His new role will include guiding the launch of new products and initiatives such as The Times’ editorial partnership with Verizon using drones, robotics and 3-D mapping technologies to enhance storytelling capabilities and a forthcoming project to spotlight individuals who are shaping the future of Los Angeles.

Judy Woodruff has announced plans to step down as anchor of PBS’ nightly “Newshour” program at the end of the year. Woodruff, 75, said she will report longer pieces for “Newshour” and do other projects and specials for public television, at least through the 2024 presidential election.

FROM THE WASHINGTON POST:

Political philosopher and author Danielle

Allen has rejoined The Washington Post Opinions section as a contributing columnist. Allen wrote columns for The Post for several years until announcing in December 2020 that she was exploring a run for governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat. She went on to formally enter the race before ending her campaign this February.

Travis Lyles has become deputy director, social, off-platform curation for The Washington Post. In this

new role, he will lead the strategic growth of The Post’s expanding social portfolio, which includes Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, Snapchat and Telegram. In many ways, this is a formalization of what he has been doing since February, when he stepped up to oversee the core social team on an interim basis.

Mike Hume has become editor for The Washington Post’s Emerging News Products team. In this role he will focus on the development of new products and explore ways to reshape and bolster the paper’s current offerings. He will craft new product ideas, lead experiments and collaborate with editors around the newsroom to shape strategies for new and expanding coverage areas.

Daniela Santamariña has been named a projects editor for The Washington Post’s Emerging News Products team. In this role she will be responsible for shaping multi-channel strategies, creating timelines, analyzing data, conducting experiments and establishing key performance indicators. She takes on this new role after spending the past two and a half years as a graphics reporter with a focus on newsletters.

Patrick Marley has joined The Washington Post in the newly created position of democracy reporter for the Upper Midwest. He will focus on how state and local officials navigate pressures on the administration of elections, while tracking legislative and legal battles over voting rules and access to the polls. He will also be responsible for telling the stories of people and communities who have lost faith in the ability of their government to hold free and fair elections. His reporting will center on Wisconsin, Michigan and other parts of the Upper Midwest. He joined The Post from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Yvonne Wingett Sanchez also has joined The Washington Post in the newly created position of democracy reporter for Arizona. Her reporting will center on Arizona and the West. She joins The Post from the Arizona Republic.

Emily Chow Mitnick has joined The Washington Post as head of product operations. In this role, she will work closely with Chief Product Officer and Managing Editor Kat Downs Mulder to drive cross-functional collaboration and operational efficiency across the hybrid Newsroom-product-engineering organization and other teams at The Post.

Christine Armario has joined the America desk with The Washington Post as a deputy editor, helping expand the paper’s reach and guide the team as it crafts deeply reported enterprise and covers major national breaking news. She has worked for the last year as a deputy editor on the General Assignment team.

Salvador Rizzo is joining Metro at The Washington Post to cover the federal courts in Virginia. He will cover the Eastern District of Virginia, as well as law enforcement in Arlington and Alexandria.

Annah Aschbrenner has joined The Washington Post as Congress editor,

taking on the mission of steering the paper’s Capitol Hill coverage and mapping one of the biggest political stories in America. She comes to The Post from USA Today, where she has most recently steered coverage of the White House, Congress and national politics. Anthony Faiola has been named a correspondent-at-large with The Washington Post. In 28 years at

The Post, he has been bureau chief in Buenos Aires, Tokyo, London, Berlin and, since 2017, for South America and the Caribbean, based in Miami. (In between, he served as bureau chief in New York and as global economics correspondent in Washington.) With his shift to a more global role, The Post’s correspondents in Mexico City, Bogota and Toronto will take on additional coverage responsibilities in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Paulina Firozi has joined the Climate & Environment Department at The Washington Post as an assistant editor. In this new role, she will work with reporters and editors throughout the department to conceive and edit news and enterprise about the climate, environment and extreme weather. She also will help coordinate coverage with other desks. Firozi has worked for The Post for five years.

Caroline O’donovan has joined The Washington Post’s tech team to cover Amazon and Microsoft. Since 2015, she has been a reporter for Buzzfeed News.

Rebecca Tan will become Southeast Asia bureau chief for The Washington Post, responsible for covering a rapidly changing swath of the world that stretches from the Philippines to Bangladesh. Before joining The Post in 2019, Tan, who was born and raised in Singapore, was an intern at Vox and then at The Post for back-toback summers that included stints on Foreign and then Local.

Peter Finn, who has led The Washington Post’s national security team since 2013, has been named senior editor for international investigations, a new leadership position aimed at elevating the paper’s ability to produce distinctive and consequential international journalism. As part of Post teams, national security staff members have won the Pulitzer Prize three times and twice were finalists in his time as editor. In his new role, Finn will oversee a new team of correspondents based primarily outside the United States, with a focus on original, ambitious and penetrating journalism on major coverage areas of global significance.

Damian Paletta is the new deputy business editor at The Washington Post, helping to lead the staff in a time of continued growth and ambition. He joins the desk’s leadership after three years as economics editor, driving front-line coverage of some of the biggest stories in pandemic Washington, from the federal response to the economic crisis to the lurching and uneven recovery that sparked sweeping changes in the way people think about work.

Matt Zapotosky has been named a criminal justice editor on The Washington Post’s Metro desk. Local Editor Mike Semel and Deputy Local Editor Maria Glod said Zapotosky has had an incredible six–year run covering the Justice Department, where his deep sourcing and tireless work ethic have led to several scoops for The Post, most notably that Special Counsel Robert Mueller III would investigate former president Donald Trump’s ties to Russia.

Marian Chia-ming Liu has become a projects editor at The Washington Post focused on new initiatives, which includes Lede Lab, The Post’s storytelling R&D team, and other strategic initiatives. She takes on this role after a successful run as operations editor with Metro, where she trained staff on Ellipsis, The Post’s primary digital publishing system.

Annie Linskey has taken on a new role as a national political reporter at The Washington Post and will be one of the paper’s lead reporters on the campaign team, helping spearhead coverage of the 2022 midterms and the country’s volatile political environment.

She has covered the White House since the beginning of the Biden administration and has helped drive The Post’s reporting about how the White House has contended with the pandemic, identifying weaknesses in its COVID policies.

Vanessa Williams has been named a deputy National politics editor at The Washington Post, steering coverage of voters and a changing American

electorate. Since January 2018, she has helped write and edit the twiceweekly newsletter, About US, which features reporting, analysis and perspective about how individuals and institutions navigate the debate about race, gender, sexual orientation and other identity issues.

Jenna Johnson has been appointed deputy democracy editor at The Washington Post, helping to lead a new team focused on threats to the electoral process and battles over the right to vote. In her nearly 15 years at The Post, Johnson has worked on several desks and teamed with nearly every section in the newsroom.

Mary-ellen Deily has joined the Health and Science team at The Washington Post to help edit and produce the weekly Health and Science section. For the past seven years, she has worked on The Post’s Opinions copy desk, where she has been a partner in the significant growth of Opinions online and in print.

Matt Clough has joined The Washington Post as an SEO and operations editor. In this role, he will create strategies to expand audiences through search, partner with reporting teams around the newsroom to amplify the paper’s best work, and help expand the newsroom’s understanding of SEO, recirculation and digital best practices.

FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES:

Ezequiel Minaya has joined The New York Times as an assistant editor on the Metro desk. A native New Yorker, he joins the staff from The Philadelphia Inquirer, where he was deputy business editor.

The Flexible Editing desk at The New York Times has added two editors: Rachel Brody, most recently a senior editor for The Appeal, and Brian Josephs, a show writer and copy editor for “Vice News Tonight.”

For the past four years, on behalf of Times Opinion, Kara Swisher has grilled tech titans, regulators and politicians, covered the biggest stories, and ensured accountability in a key part of modern life where there is too often very little. She is leaving Times Opinion this month to pursue new projects at Vox. Her last episode of “Sway” will drop in late July.

Danielle Rhoades Ha has been promoted to senior vice president, head of external communications with The New York Times. In this role, she will lead the paper’s public-facing communications for the company.

Kevin Quealy is the next editor of The Upshot, home for some of The New Times’ most imaginative statistical thinking and data visualization. He joined The Times as a graphics intern in 2008, and joined The Upshot when it began in 2014.

After nearly 17 years on The New York Times’ International desk, Herbert Buchsbaum joined Obituaries as an editor.

Patia Braithwaite has joined Well as a senior staff editor. Before joining The New York Times, she was health director at Well+good, where she oversaw coverage of COVID-19, heart health and maternal health among other topics.

Randy Pennell, who has edited a wide range of big stories at The New York Times and elsewhere, has joined the Live team as a senior editor. He brings years of experience covering breaking news on a wide range of topics, from pandemic relief efforts to the arrest and trial of Jerry Sandusky. He joins Live from Business, where he has worked as the finance deputy for the past four years.

Marcia Parker has joined The New York Times as vice president, philanthropic partnerships. She previously spent more than five years as the publisher and chief operating officer of Calmatters, a nonpartisan and nonprofit news organization that covers California and its state government.

Michael Brown has joined The New York Times’ legal department as vice president, assistant general counsel and assistant secretary, leading the corporate and securities practice. Most recently, he was deputy general counsel and corporate secretary at Cipher Mining, an emerging technology company specializing in Bitcoin.

Dodai Stewart has returned to The New York Times’ Metro staff as a writer at large, covering life in the city in all its vibrancy, beauty and complexity. Since 2020, she has been a deputy on Special Projects.

The Opinion team at The New York Times has announced a new full-time copy editor, Lauren Leibowitz, and a new art director, Sam Whitney.

The New York Times announces that Nick Haramis is T magazine’s new editor at large. In his new role, he will be serving as the magazine’s fashion features director. He will also be editing design stories alongside Kurt Soller. In addition, he’ll be writing as many fashion profiles and features as he can handle, as well as design and culture stories.

Mira Rojanasakul has joined The New York Times Climate desk as a graphics editor reporting and creating visual stories. She comes to The Times from Bloomberg, where she has worked on the graphics desk for eight years, covering climate change, elections,

international politics and financial investigations.

Jeremy Ashkenas has rejoined The New York Times as graphics director for Opinion. He recently served as principal engineer at Substack, where he built publishing tools for independent writers, and at Observable, where he helped design and develop a computational notebook for data visualization.

The New York Times has announced that Melina Delkic has joined the Express Team as a senior staff editor, after a highly successful embed on the Business Desk.

Hasit Shah has joined the London Home Team at The New York Times as a senior staff editor. He joins the staff from Quartz, where he spent two years as news editor.

Sara Ziegler has joined Sports at The New York Times as deputy editor for strategy and operations. Ziegler previously was the sports editor at Fivethirtyeight. Anna P. Kambhampaty and Ronda Kaysen have joined Real Estate at The New York Times as reporters. They have joined Stefanos Chen to create a dream team of reporters for a section that has long been reliant on freelancers.

Ben Hubbard, who has reported doggedly in the Middle East for The New York Times, is now taking on the role of Istanbul bureau chief. He will be moving to Istanbul this summer.

The New York Times has announced, on behalf of the audience and video departments, that two of its contract employees have joined as fulltime staff: Adrienne Shih, editor on the audience team, and Adam Westbrook, producer and editor on the video team. 

INSIDE

en-us

2022-07-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-07-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://editorandpublisher.pressreader.com/article/282157884942217

Editor and Publisher