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The New York Observer
''The New York Observer'' was a weekly newspaper printed from 1987 to 2016, when it ceased print publication and became the online-only newspaper ''Observer''. The media site focuses on culture, real estate, media, politics and the entertainment and publishing industries. History The ''Observer'' was first published in New York City on September 22, 1987, as a weekly newspaper by Arthur L. Carter, a former investment banker. The ''New York Observer'' had also been the title of an earlier weekly religious paper founded by Sidney E. Morse in 1823. In July 2006, the paper was purchased by the American real estate figure Jared Kushner, then 25 years old. The paper began its life as a broadsheet, and was then printed in tabloid format every Wednesday, and currently has an exclusively online format. It is headquartered at 1 Whitehall Street in Manhattan. Previous writers for the publication include Kara Bloomgarden–Smoke, Kim Velsey, Matthew Kassel, Jillian Jorgensen, Joe Co ...
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Sidney Edwards Morse
Sidney Edwards Morse (7 February 1794 Charlestown, Massachusetts – 24 December 1871 New York City) was an American inventor, geographer and journalist. He was the brother of telegraphy pioneer and painter Samuel F. B. Morse. Biography Morse was the son of geographer and clergyman Jedidiah Morse. He graduated from Yale in 1811, studied theology at Andover Seminary, and law at the Litchfield, Connecticut, school. Meanwhile, he became a contributor to the '' Columbian Centinel'' of Boston, writing a series of articles that illustrated the danger to the American Union from an undue multiplication of new states in the south, and showing that it would give to a sectional minority the control of the government. These led to his being invited by Jeremiah Evarts and others to found a weekly religious newspaper, to which he gave the name '' Boston Recorder''. He continued as sole editor and proprietor of this journal for more than a year, and in this time raised its circulation until i ...
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Joe Conason
Joe Conason (born January 25, 1954) is an American journalist, author and liberal political commentator. He is the founder and editor-in-chief of ''The National Memo'', a daily political newsletter and website that features breaking news and commentary. Since 2006, he has served as editor of The Investigative Fund, a nonprofit journalism center. Conason was formerly the executive editor of the ''New York Observer'', where he wrote a popular political column for almost 20 years. He was also a columnist for Salon.com from 1998 to 2010. His articles have appeared in dozens of publications around the world including ''The New York Times'', ''The Washington Post'', ''The New Yorker'', ''The New Republic'', ''The Nation'', ''The Guardian'', ''The Village Voice'' and ''Harpers''. Conason's books include ''The Hunting of the President'' (2000) and ''Big Lies: The Right-Wing Propaganda Machine and How It Distorts the Truth'' (2003). His newest book, ''Man of the World'' (2016), focuses o ...
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Terry Golway
Terry Golway is a historian, author, and a journalist, having served as a columnist and editorial board member for ''The New York Times'' and a long-time editor and writer at ''The New York Observer''. Career In 2010 Golway discovered a historic early census count predating the creation of the United States at Liberty Hall National Historic Landmark at Kean. He is the author of several books on American and Irish history. Golway's book on John F. Kennedy, ''JFK: Day by Day'', was made into an iPad app to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Kennedy's inauguration. Golway is an occasional op-ed columnist for ''The New York Times'', where he was once a member of the editorial board. Previously, he spent two decades at ''The New York Observer''. he still writes periodic pieces for the “pink paper of lore” (''The New York Observer''); he served as a political reporter, city editor and columnist for that paper in earlier years. Books authored *''JFK: Day by Day: A Chronicle of th ...
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Anne Roiphe
Anne Roiphe (born December 25, 1935) is an American writer and journalist. She is best known as a first-generation feminist and author of the novel ''Up the Sandbox'' (1970), filmed as a starring vehicle for Barbra Streisand in 1972. In 1996, ''Salon'' called the book "a feminist classic."Eckoff, Sally, Salon, "Fruitful," October 11, 1996. Background and education Roiphe was born and raised to a Jewish family in New York City. She graduated from the Brearley School in 1953 and received her Bachelor of Arts from Sarah Lawrence College in 1957. Roiphe is also a cousin of controversial attorney Roy Cohn Career Over a four-decade career, Roiphe has proven so prolific that the critic Sally Eckhoff observed "tracing Anne Roiphe's career often feels like following somebody through a revolving door: the requirements of keeping the pace can be trying." (Eckhoff described the writer as "a free-thinking welter of contradictions, a never-say-die feminist who's absolutely nuts about childre ...
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Simon Doonan
Simon Doonan (born 1952 He worked at Barneys until it closed in 2019. He writes a column on style for ''Slate''. In his book, ''Eccentric Glamour'', he decried porno chic in Western society in general. Interviewed for an article for the ''New York Daily News,'' he said, "There are two horribly worrying trends! Celebrities are becoming so gun-shy that there is no diversity, no sense of fun on the red carpet. There's no experimentation – which is incredibly important to fashion." On "porno chic," (the second trend) he said, "Imagine if you said to people 20 years ago that, in 2008, a significant number of women would be going around dressing like porno stars with fake hooters and butt cracks showing? No one would have believed you." In September 2008, he married his husband, designer Jonathan Adler, in California. Appearances Doonan has made appearances on VH1's ''I Love the'' series, offering social commentary on each decade. He has also been a guest star on ''America' ...
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Nicholas Von Hoffman
Nicholas von Hoffman (October 16, 1929 – February 1, 2018) was an American journalist and author. He first worked as a community organizer for Saul Alinsky in Chicago for ten years from 1953 to 1963. Later, Von Hoffman wrote for ''The Washington Post'', and most notably, was a commentator on the CBS ''Point-Counterpoint'' segment for ''60 Minutes,'' from which Don Hewitt fired him in 1974. von Hoffman was also a columnist for ''The Huffington Post''. Life and career A native New Yorker of German and Russian descent, von Hoffman was born to Anna L. Bruenn, a dentist, and Carl von Hoffman, an explorer and adventurer. Von Hoffman never attended college. In the 1950s, he worked on the research staff of the Industrial Relations Center of the University of Chicago, and then for Saul Alinsky as a field representative of the Industrial Areas Foundation in Chicago, where his best known role was as lead organizer for The Woodlawn Organization. Ben Bradlee, former editor of ''The Washin ...
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Robert Gottlieb
Robert Adams Gottlieb (born April 29, 1931) is an American writer and editor. He has been editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster, Alfred A. Knopf, and ''The New Yorker''. Early life and education Robert Gottlieb was born to a Jewish family in New York City in 1931 and grew up in Manhattan. During his childhood, he "was your basic, garden-variety, ambitious, upwardly mobile, hard-working Jewish boy from Brooklyn. I was bound to go beyond my parents. It was simply the way things were." His middle name was given to him in honor of his uncle, Arthur Adams, who is now known to have been a Soviet spy. Gottlieb graduated from Columbia University in 1952, and then spent two years at Cambridge University before joining Simon & Schuster in 1955. Career Gottlieb joined Simon & Schuster in 1955 as an editorial assistant to Jack Goodman, the editor-in-chief. Within ten years he himself became the editor-in-chief. At that publisher, Gottlieb's most notable discovery, which he edited, was '' ...
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John Heilpern
John David Heilpern (8 April 1942 – 7 January 2021) was a British theatre critic, journalist, and author who worked both in the United Kingdom and the United States. He was a contributing editor to ''Vanity Fair'' (where he wrote the "Out To Lunch" feature) and longtime drama critic for the ''New York Observer.''''New York Observer''
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Heilpern, the son of a bookmaker, was born in , England, and educated at . He began his career at ''



Ross Barkan
Ross Elliot Barkan (born October 22, 1989) is an American journalist, novelist, columnist, and essayist. Early life and education Barkan grew up in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. He attended Stony Brook University and earned a master's degree from New York University. Career Journalist Barkan was a staff reporter at the '' Queens Tribune''. He covered New York City and national politics for the ''New York Observer'' from 2013 to 2016. In April 2016, he rose to prominence after resigning from the ''Observer'' over the newspaper's close relationship with Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate. ''The Observer''s executive editor, Ken Kurson, revealed in a magazine interview he advised Trump on a speech the candidate delivered before the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. Announcing his resignation the day after the ''Observer'' endorsed Trump in the New York Republican primary, Barkan later told CNN "a line had been crossed and I thought it was time for myself to depart ...
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Azi Paybarah
Azi Paybarah is a New York-based journalist who focuses on local politics. He worked as a reporter for the ''New York Press'', the '' Queens Tribune'' and the ''New York Sun''. In February 2011, Paybarah returned to ''The New York Observer'' which he had left a few months earlier, where he wrote for the daily blog, The Politicker. In September 2011 he joined the online news publication ''Capital'' as senior writer. Paybarah also hosts a political blog on the website of the local NPR station, WNYC. Career At times Paybarah will inform political colleagues or rivals of a controversial statement another politician has made to provoke a reaction. An example of this was when he informed others of congressional candidate David Weprin's statements in an interview for ''Vosizneias'', one of the largest Orthodox Jewish websites in the United States, regarding the marriage equality law which allows gay and lesbian marriages in New York State. In May 2009, Paybarah made headlines for be ...
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Michael Tomasky
Michael John Tomasky (born October 13, 1960) is an American columnist, progressive commentator, and author. He is the editor of ''The New Republic'' and editor in chief of ''Democracy''. He has been a special correspondent for ''Newsweek'', ''The Daily Beast'', a contributing editor for ''The American Prospect'', and a contributor to ''The New York Review of Books''. Life and career Tomasky was born and raised in Morgantown, West Virginia, the son of Maria (Aluisi) and Michael Tomasky, a trial attorney. He is of Serbian and Italian descent. He attended West Virginia University as an undergraduate and then studied political science in graduate school at New York University. His work has also appeared in ''The New York Times Book Review'', ''The Washington Post'', ''Harper's Weekly'', ''The Nation'', ''The Village Voice'', ''The New York Review of Books'', ''Dissent'', ''Lingua Franca'', '' George'', and '' GQ''. He lives with his wife Sarah and daughter (Margot Julianna Kerr Toma ...
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Richard Brookhiser
Richard Brookhiser (; born February 23, 1955) is an American journalist, biographer and historian. He is a senior editor at ''National Review''. He is most widely known for a series of biographies of America's founders, including Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur Morris, and George Washington. Life and career Brookhiser was born in Irondequoit, a suburb north of Rochester, New York. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC Document Number: H1000111697 His father worked for Eastman Kodak in Rochester and was a lieutenant in the Army Air Corps during World War II. He has written books that deal either with the nation's founding, or the principles of America's founders, including '' What Would the Founders Do?'', a book describing how the Founding Fathers of the United States would approach topical issues that generate controversy in modern-day America. Brookhiser began writing for ''National Review'' i ...
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