Early life
The younger of two brothers, Howard, grew up in the coastal city of Geelong, Victoria. Howard began his studies at Western Heights College and RMIT University before moving to Deakin. He holds a BA in journalism from Deakin University in Australia. Howard started his journalism career as a teenager in 1999, writing for ''The Geelong Advertiser'', a daily newspaper circulating in Victoria,Career
Seven News
Howard joined Seven News (7NEWS) in 2004 as a sports reporter and producer. His primary reporting focus was on the Australian Rules Football League (AFL), but during the summer months, he would present the Melbourne evening sports bulletin. Howard's 2007 report, revealing the impending sacking of an Australian football coach, garnered him local acclaim. In 2008, Howard published a controversial AFL story that involved paying for and publishing two footballers’ medical records and the confidential details of their drug use. The story prompted an investigation, and neither the network nor Howard was charged. Howard left the network shortly after – when his contract was not renewed.Arrival in United States
In January 2009, Howard moved to New York to head Crocmedia's U.S. arm and wrote for various publications including ''Hello, Woman's Day, OK!, Men's Style, Ralph Magazine, In Touch,'' and ''The Sunday Mail's Celebs on Sunday''. In 2009, Howard reported for '' Reuters'' in New York City.American Media, Inc.
In 2010, he joined ''RadarOnline.com'' and ''Star'' inEmpire Media
On 6 October 2020 Howard was announced as the U.S. publisher and chief executive officer of global fashion media brand, Grazia. On 25 March 2021, Howard announced he had formed the media conglomerate, Empire Media Group, Inc., based in New York City, and had purchased ''RadarOnline.com'' and ''OKmagazine.com'' from his former employer, American Media. He also announced the acquisition of several other publications including; ''Yoga MagBook'', ''How It Works'', and ''All About Space'' amongst others. According to Howard, the company is privately owned without investors. In May 2021, Grazia launched in Asia and in the Hamptons under Howard’s Pantheon Media Group. Empire acquired Knewz in fall 2021.Publications
In August 2019, Howard signed an exclusive deal to publish his true crime titles with Skyhorse and Start Publishing. * ''Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales'' (3 December 2019) * ''Aaron Hernandez’s Killing Fields'' (5 November 2019) * ''Diana: Case Solved'' (17 September 2019) * ''The Last Charles Manson Tapes: Evil Lives Beyond the Grave'' (26 November 2019) * ''Billion Dollar Hollywood Heist'' (24 March 2020) * ''Royals at War'' (30 June 2020) * ''BAD: An Unprecedented Investigation into the Michael Jackson Cover-Up'' (7 July 2020) *''COVID-19: The Greatest Cover-Up in History—From Wuhan to the White House'' (5 October 2020)Filmography
Howard appeared in, and executive produced the 3-part mini-series "JonBenet: An American Murder Mystery" on Investigation Discovery and was the most-watched series in the history of the network (2016). Howard also executive produced "''National Enquirer Investigates,''" "''Casey Anthony: An American Murder Mystery''," "''The Kitty Kelley Files''," and others. He has also made guest appearances on Dr. Phil,Audio
Howard executive produced and created the podcast ''Fatal Voyage: The Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood'', a Webby award-winning investigation into the actress’ death. During its opening week, the podcast ranked No. 2 on the iTunes Charts and was one of Apple Podcasts' Most Downloaded New Shows of 2018. Howard also executive produced, ''The Killing of Marilyn Monroe, Killing JonBenet Ramsay: The Final Suspects,'' and ''Epstein: Devil in The Darkness'' amongst others.Awards
Howard was named the 2011 Entertainment Journalist of the Year at the Los Angeles Press Club's National Entertainment Journalism Awards (NEJA). In awarding him the top national honor, they also noted: "In the world of celebrity and entertainment news, even mainstream media couldn’t ignore exclusive stories broken under Dylan Howard’s tenure as senior executive editor of RadarOnline.com." The ''Los Angeles Times'' said of Howard that he "transform(ed) America’s tabloid culture." He is a twelve-time NEJA winner and 14-time finalist. He has previously won L.A. Press Club awards for online news reporting— Mel Gibson audiotapes—and investigative journalism, for exposing a secret Hollywood poker ring involving A-List actors Tobey Maguire, Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, and Leonardo DiCaprio. He has been nominated 11 times for various L.A. Press Club awards.Controversies
Jeff Bezos
On 7 February 2019, Jeff Bezos accused Howard, The ''National Enquirer'', AMI and its CEO David Pecker of attempted blackmail after the ''Enquirer'' exposed his extra-marital affair and released his text messages. Bezos published an email Howard had sent to his attorney describing various intimate photographs, including a "below the belt selfie" they had in their possession. In the blog post, Bezos refused to negotiate with AMI. AMI attorney Jon Fine followed the email with demands that Bezos cease an ongoing investigation of AMI's previous release of Bezos' private text messages. American Media Inc., said it "acted lawfully in the reporting of the story of Mr. Bezos. At the time of the recent allegations made by Mr. Bezos, it was in good faith negotiations to resolve all matters with him." ''Donald Trump
In the mid-2010s, adult film actress Stormy Daniels and Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal received payments in exchange for not publicly discussing their sexual encounters with then-presidential candidate Donald Trump. The settlements drew Howard into the Trump campaign expense controversy as his employer, AMI., had facilitated one of the payments. ''Harvey Weinstein
Howard received media attention for providing Harvey Weinstein with information about Rose McGowan, an actress who made a sexual harassment claim directed toward Weinstein. Howard provided this information to Weinstein at the time Weinstein was denying any harassment claims and did so to maintain a strong working relationship with Weinstein due to "mutual business interests" a lawyer for Howard said. Howard stated that he pursued Weinstein's request "as a courtesy" but refused to publish any material about the subject, resisting each of Weinstein's "repeated efforts" to have Howard publish favourable stories about him or unfavourable stories about his accusers. On 7 March 2018, Howard successfully sued Nine Network's 60 Minutes after they unlawfully trespassed on private property and attempted to question him about the Weinstein story in his New York office lobby.Charlie Sheen
On 22 April 2016, issue of ''Medical records
The medical records of two players from an AFL club were claimed to have been found in the gutter outside a clinic by a woman. After allegedly attempting to return the documents to the clinic and finding that the gates were locked, the woman began to call all the media outlets in Melbourne, offering the documents as a "public service." Her asking price was A$3,000. Channel 7 purchased the documents and around 4:15 on Friday, 24 August 2007, Channel 7 began reporting that it had a "huge story" related to AFL and drugs. At 6 pm AEST Howard went on air and named the club that the two players played for. A court injunction was sought to suppress the name and club mentioned in the records and was granted by Justice Kim Hargrave of the Supreme Court of Victoria. Later on 24 August, during half time on Channel 7's Friday Night Football, Howard participated in an on-air interview, conducted by Tim Watson where he claimed that after contacting the AFL, it had given Howard "approval" to go to air with the story. This interview went live, via Fox Sports to New South Wales and Queensland and on the CCTV at the Telstra Dome, but was not in the program that aired on the Seven Network during the delayed coverage into Victoria, South Australia or Western Australia after Howard admitted he inadvertently misspoke. Howard, on Tuesday 28 August 2007, went on 3AW during the Sport's Today program and explained to Caroline Wilson that his comments on Friday night had been misinterpreted and that he had "apologised to those who misunderstood that at the time". The AFL CEO, Andrew Demetriou, then responded to Howard's interview on 3AW, saying that "It's mischievous, and we have asked him to apologise, given that it went to air in two states, and all Dylan Howard had to do was apologise. We will not be misrepresented to people about the AFL supporting a story that we've already said publicly we find obscene, abhorrent, the route of gutter journalism".Drugs in sports
On 1 August 2007, Australian Football League star, Jason Akermanis wrote an article for Melbourne's NewsCorp paper, the '' Herald Sun'', stating that he 'felt' that his direct opponent in previous games seemed able to run faster and recover better. The implication was that this player was using performance-enhancing drugs. Jason didn't name the player in his article, but it prompted an investigation by ASADA, the Australian Sports Anti-doping Authority. Days later, Howard, who to date has yet to name his source, revealed that the player who Jason was referring to and was being probed was Michael Braun a player for the West Coast Eagles. Akermanis later apologised to Braun. In response, Howard attacked the AFL in an opinion column in the ''Geelong Advertiser'', accusing the AFL of being "vicious political animals" and stating, "some reporters and commentators feel they have been deliberately targeted, not because they crossed an ethical line, but because they refused to toe the line." Journalist Adam Schwab said, "Many in the community will no doubt be disappointed that the only hard line taken by the AFL is towards journalists, and not the drug takers."Violence
While on assignment in Ireland, broke the story that Australian Football League star Brendan Fevola had been in a fight with that pub's bartender while he was a member of the All Australian team visiting Ireland for the International Rules SeriesPersonal life
Born in Australia, he would later take up residency in the United States. In December 2017, Howard purchased a house in East Hampton, NY valued at $1.1million USD. On April 22, 2024, former American Media Inc. head David Pecker revealed that Howard, who was considered to be a potential witness in Donald's Trump's New York criminal case, was now living in Australia and also suffering from a "spinal condition" which makes it impossible for him to travel internationally.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Howard, Dylan Australian television journalists Australian television presenters Living people Deakin University alumni People from Geelong 1982 births National Enquirer people