AltWeekly Awards judges don't have it easy. Now in its 12th year, the awards have grown into 23 categories with two circulation divisions. Papers sent in their brightest entries: 1,481 of them. The Feature Story category had the most submissions in a single category, with 199 competing against each other.
To handle that number of entries, AAN recruited almost 170 distinguished journalists who spent nearly three months examining materials. The participating judges have a wide variety of professional experience. Many previously worked at alt-weeklies. Some are currently working at some of the largest mainstream newspapers in the country. Others work in printed and online magazines, blogs, new media companies, and journalism schools. Their collective resumes feature journalism's highest honors, including fellowships, AltWeekly Awards, and a dozen or so Pulitzer Prizes.
The AltWeekly Awards are judged in two different ways. The writing/reporting categories (Arts Criticism, Investigative Reporting, News Story, etc.) are judged in two rounds. Teams of preliminary judges review all entries, and the six to eight highest scoring entries advance to the final round. Three judges independently review the finalists for both circulation divisions. The awards administrator calculates the scores and shares the ranks with the final judges. At that point, the judges are allowed to discuss and approve the final ranking.
Each design and web category (Editorial Layout, Illustration, Photography, Blog, etc.) is evaluated by three judges. They independently review and score entries. The six to eight highest scoring entries advance into a second round. Judges re-examine the materials, and enter a second set of scores. The awards administrator shares the ranks with judges, who are then allowed to discuss and approve the final ranking.
In the fall, AAN will release
Best AltWeekly Writing and Design 2007, which features the first-place winners' work, judge commentary and the judges' biographies. For more information, contact
Heather Kuldell.
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Howard Altman has won more than 50 journalism awards and is happy to return the love. Currently courts and cops team leader at
The Tampa Tribune, he was an editor and columnist at the
Philadelphia City Paper. His work has appeared in
The New York Times, Newsday, American Journalism Review, Irish Independent, Salon.com, Wired.com,
Penthouse and
Philadelphia City Paper. When he's not badgering writers or banging out stories, he can be found coaching his kids' teams, or on a fishing pier, contributing frozen shrimp to the underwater economy.
Amy Argetsinger co-authors "The Reliable Source," a gossip column for the Style section of
The Washington Post. She previously covered education, local politics, crime and other beats for the Post as well as staffing its West Coast bureau for a year.
Gil Asakawa was music editor of Denver's alternative newsweekly
Westword from 1980-1991, and was also entertainment editor and art critic for the
Colorado Springs Gazette from 1992-1996. Since then he has worked online and is currently director of content for
Examiner.com. He has also written freelance articles for
NY Rocker, Request, Creem, Pulse and
Rolling Stone magazines, and has authored
Being Japanese American (Stone Bridge Press 2004) and co-authored
The Toy Book (Knopf, 1991).
Stephanie Banchero is an education reporter at the
Chicago Tribune. In 2005, Banchero received a first-place award from the national Education Writers Association and the first-place writing award from the Missouri School of Journalism for her coverage of a 9-year-old affected by the No Child Left Behind Act. That same year, she also was on a team of reporters who won a second-place award from EWA for coverage of state education issues. Banchero joined the
Tribune as a reporter in 1997, having previously served at such papers as
The Charlotte Observer, The Philadelphia Inquirer and
The Salt Lake Tribune. She graduated from University of Utah with a B.A. in communications and received her M.A. from the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. She was born in Salt Lake City in 1963.
Dan Baum, who just got fired from
The New Yorker magazine, is working on a book about New Orleans. He works with his wife, Margaret L. Knox. In addition to
The New Yorker, they've written for
Rolling Stone, Wired, Playboy and
Monterey County Weekly.
Erin Behan, who resides in Brooklyn with her husband and two cats, spends most of her day making the Internet safe for consumption at
Citysearch.com. She freelanced for both
Topside Loaf and
Creative Loafing while in Atlanta, where she started her Internet career. Despite her online time, she still has a soft spot for the printed word.
John Bicknell is the social policy editor for
Congressional Quarterly. He has been a journalist for more than 20 years, the last seven-and-a-half in Washington at
CQ.
Rebecca Blood, author of
The Weblog Handbook, began blogging in 1999. She is now an internationally known speaker on the Internet's impact on business, media and society. Her website is
rebeccablood.net.
Nicole Bogdas is news projects designer at
The Palm Beach Post and was previously lead news designer at the
South Florida Sun-Sentinel. She is on the board of directors for the Society for News Design, an organization that has recognized her work numerous times. Bogdas is a native of Chicagoland and credits the
Chicago Reader with vastly improving her suburban upbringing.
Michael Booth is a movie critic and entertainment writer for
The Denver Post. He has covered city hall, health care, the environment, wildfires and other subjects, and was a Sunday feature writer for five years. He has won the Best of the West award for column writing and the national Education Writers Award for feature writing. His book,
The Denver Post Guide to Family Films, will appear in the fall.
Bill Brazell finds and evaluates high-quality blogs as director of author services at Federated Media (
federatedmedia.net). He was a senior news editor at the
Industry Standard magazine, then a senior editor at Portfolio, a business-book imprint at Penguin. Brazell was recently elected to the Board of Trustees of the PKD Foundation. He also wrote the male half of a humorous male-female dictionary called
He Meant, She Meant (Warner Books). He majored in English at Harvard, got a master's in journalism at U.C. Berkeley, and lives in Brooklyn.
John Breneman is an editor and columnist at the
Boston Herald, and publisher of the satire website
HumorGazette.com.
Clint Brewer is an executive editor of
The City Paper, a free daily newspaper in Nashville, and president-elect of the national Society of Professional Journalists. Brewer is a native of Knoxville and a lifelong Tennessee resident. He began his career in the mid-1990s as a staff reporter for the 9,500-circulation daily
The Lebanon Democrat, covering state and local politics as well as business and economic development. Brewer is a four-time winner of the Malcolm Law Memorial Award for Investigative Reporting from the Tennessee Associated Press Managing Editor's conference and now teaches at a variety of journalism conferences. He lives in the Gladeville community of Wilson County, Tenn., with his wife, Amy, and his two children, Emma Grace, 5, and Davis Clinton, 3.
Stephen Burd is senior research fellow in the education policy program at the New America Foundation. In this capacity, he will help shape the foundation's work on higher-education policy, particularly the nexus between postsecondary education and high-school policy issues, and on student financial-aid issues, including student loans. Mr. Burd was previously a senior writer at
The Chronicle of Higher Education, where he focused on federal higher-education policy and the inner workings of student loan and financial aid policy. Over a decade and a half, his career at
The Chronicle was marked by numerous notable news scoops, and by his success at driving national coverage of student-aid issues. Mr. Burd holds a bachelor's degree in history from Swarthmore College.
Ada Calhoun is the editor-in-chief of the new urban parenting magazine
Babble.com, and the consulting editor of sex-and-culture magazine
Nerve.com. She has worked at
New York magazine and
Vogue, and written about books and theater for
The New York Times. Her first professional writing job was at
The Austin Chronicle.
Alicia Wagner Calzada is an independent photojournalist based in San Antonio, Texas. Alicia is a past president of the National Press Photographers Association and the chair of the NPPA Advocacy Committee. A graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, she has worked on the staffs of
Rumbo, Orlando Sentinel, and
The Advocate (Baton Rouge, La.). She currently shoots for a variety of editorial and corporate clients. Her website is
aliciaphoto.com.
David Carr is a media columnist and general assignment culture reporter at
The New York Times. He also writes a seasonal blog about the Oscars. Carr is a former editor of
Washington City Paper and the
Twin Cities Reader.
Ethan Casey is the author of the travel book
Alive and Well in Pakistan and author or editor of several other books. He has been an international reporter for
The Globe and Mail, Financial Times, The Boston Globe, South China Morning Post and other publications, and a pioneering online editor (Blue Ear, 1999-2005). He is currently co-host of PakCast: A Weekly Audio Dialogue Between Pakistan and the West (
packast.com). He lives in Seattle.
Jane Catoe is a former columnist and section editor for Atlanta's
Creative Loafing newspaper. Since leaving
Creative Loafing, Catoe has been a freelance writer and stay-at-home mother to her now 3-year-old daughter. Over the years, she has lived and written in Atlanta, Charleston, S.C., Albuquerque, N.M., Boston, Las Vegas, Richmond, Va., and Scottsdale. Catoe currently lives in South Carolina.
Marc Charisse is the editor of a community daily in Hanover, Penn. He has a Ph.D. in mass media law and history from the University of Washington and is a former reporter/media columnist for
Folio Weekly in Jacksonville, Fla.
Tracy Collins is deputy managing editor at
The Arizona Republic, in charge of visuals, the copy desk, sports and technology. He joined the paper as sports editor in 2000, and also has served as presentation editor, planning editor and convergence editor. He was graphics/design editor then assistant managing editor for news at the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette before moving west. He has been a managing editor, city editor, presentation editor, features editor, sports editor, news editor, copy editor, reporter, music critic and video game reviewer at half a dozen newspapers, ranging in size from 16,000 to 620,000.
Joe Conason writes a weekly column for
The New York Observer that is distributed by Creators Syndicate. He is also a columnist for
Salon.com, and director of the Nation Institute Investigative Fund. His books, Big Lies (2003) and
The Hunting of the President (2000), with Gene Lyons, were both national bestsellers. His latest book,
It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush, was released in February 2007.
Maureen Conners has been deputy editor of social policy at
Congressional Quarterly in Washington since June 2004. She helps supervise and edits stories by six reporters on the team, which covers legislation in Congress dealing with education, labor, housing, legal affairs and heath care. She went to
CQ from
The Baltimore Sun, where she served for eight years in various positions that included assistant bureau chief in a suburban county. Conners was also a copy editor on the Sun's metro, national and foreign desks. Before going to the
Sun, she was a copy editor at the
Orlando Sentinel for six years. Early in her career, she worked at two newspapers in West Virginia, including
The Charleston Gazette, as a reporter, copy editor and news photographer.
Judson Cowan is originally from North Carolina and holds a B.F.A. in graphic design and a B.F.A. in traditional photography. He is currently living in Atlanta working as senior art director for the Morrison Agency and spending all his free time making electronic music. He enjoys root beer a great deal and video games even more so. There is speculation that he is incredibly wealthy and handsome but these rumors are largely unconfirmed.
Jerry Cullum is senior editor of
Art Papers, an international magazine of contemporary art based in Atlanta. He also curates exhibitions from time to time and has reviewed art regularly for
The Atlanta Journal Constitution.
Anne-Marie Cusac, assistant professor in the department of communication at Roosevelt University, is a George Polk Award-winning journalist. For 10 years, she was an editor and investigative reporter for
The Progressive magazine. Cusac won the George Polk Award for her article "Stunning Technology," an investigation of the use of the stun belt in U.S. prisons. She has won the Project Censored Award three times-in 1997, for "Shock Value: U.S. Stun Devices Pose Human-Rights Risk," in 1998, for "Nuclear Spoons: Hot Metal May Find its Way to Your Dinner Table," and again in 2003 for "Brazen Bosses." She has also been recognized with a second-place John Bartlow Martin Award, and a 2002 Milwaukee Press Club Award for magazine reporting. Cusac is also the author of two books of poetry, most recently
Silkie, published by Many Mountains Moving Press in 2007.
Bill Daley is food and wine critic at the
Chicago Tribune. He writes a weekly wine column, "Uncorked," for the
Tribune's "Good Eating" food section. He also answers questions from readers in a Sunday Q&A column called "Daley Drink." It runs in the newspaper's Q section. In tackling the food and wine beat, Daley covers chefs and food personalities, cooking techniques and trends. He tapes a weekly spot on food and wine for WBBM-AM, the CBS all-news radio station in town. He is featured in a weekly video segment posted on the
Tribune's website. Daley spent 13 years at
The Hartford Courant, most recently as restaurant reviewer, as well as a food writer for the
San Francisco Chronicle. He has been recognized twice for restaurant criticism by the Association of Food Journalists and served as that organization's president from 2002-2004.
Steve Davolt has survived 15 years as an editor and writer in the Grub Street sweatshops of Washington, D.C., which makes him living proof that what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. While he has been associated with such consumer and trade publications as
American Gardener, Destination Discovery and
Washington Business Journal, his heart has always belonged to alternative newspapers.
Anthony DeCurtis is the author, most recently, of
In Other Words: Artists Talk About Life and Work (Hal Leonard), and a contributing editor at
Rolling Stone. He teaches in the writing program at the University of Pennsylvania and at the Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York.
Jim DeRogatis is the pop-music critic at the
Chicago Sun-Times and the co-host of "Sound Opinions," the world's only rock 'n' roll talk show, which is syndicated on Public Radio via American Public Media. He has written for many other publications, including several alternative weeklies when they were actually still alternative, and is the author of five books, including
Let It Blurt: The Life and Times of Lester Bangs, America's Greatest Rock Critic and
Staring at Sound: The True Story of Oklahoma's Fabulous Flaming Lips.
Kelly DiNardo is a freelance writer who keeps waiting to be told to get a real job. Until then, she'll drink cocktails, go racecar driving, sweat through a Bikram yoga class and learn the secrets of an Elvis impersonator - all in the name of work. Her writing has appeared in
Glamour, Redbook, The Washington Post and
USA Today. Her biography on burlesque legend Lili St. Cyr will be published in September.
Kevin Drum is a contributing writer for
The Washington Monthly and has authored its blog, Political Animal, since March 2004. Prior to that he wrote Calpundit, an independent liberal political blog. During the '90s, he was vice president of marketing for a software company in Irvine, Calif. He lives with his wife and two cats in Irvine.
Mary Ellen Egan is an associate editor and chief of reporters at
Forbes magazine. In addition to supervising the reporter pool, she also writes on a variety of topics including health care, the intersection of law and science, and new developments in biotechnology. Prior to joining
Forbes in 2001, Mary Ellen was an investigative reporter for
City Pages in Minneapolis. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Kevin Fagan is a reporter at the
San Francisco Chronicle, currently on sabbatical for a Knight Fellowship at Stanford University during the 2006-07 academic year. Since 2003, he has been the only reporter nationwide covering homelessness as a beat. Fagan has won more than 65 regional and national awards, most recently including the 2005 James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism; the 2005 Heywood Broun Award of Substantial Distinction; third place in the 2005 National Headliner Awards and the National Excellence in Urban Journalism Award from the Enterprise Foundation and the Freedom Forum for "Shame of the City," a five-part series on homelessness in San Francisco. Fagan graduated with a B.A. in journalism from San Jose State University, and has worked for United Press International,
Lodi News-Sentinel and
Oakland Tribune.
Paul Fain is a staff reporter for
The Chronicle of Higher of Education. He writes about money and management issues in higher education, reporting on college presidents, governing boards and on the surprisingly related beat of tax policy. Prior to joining
The Chronicle, Fain was a staff writer for
C-Ville Weekly, an alternative newsweekly in Charlottesville, Va., where he wrote about business, crime and politics. Fain has also written for
Washington City Paper, City Limits and
Mother Jones.
Mark Feeney is an arts writer for
The Boston Globe. He has also written for the
New Republic, New York Observer, Los Angeles Times, Washington Monthly, and other publications. A past vice president of the National Book Critics Circle, he is the author of
Nixon at the Movies: A Book about Belief (University of Chicago Press) and has taught at Brandeis and Princeton Universities.
Mark Fitzgerald is editor-at-large of
Editor & Publisher magazine, the principal publication for the newspaper industry. He covers all aspects of newspapers from journalism and ethical issues to production and finance. He is a five-time winner of the Neal Award, sometimes referred to as the Pulitzer Prize of business journalism. Mark Fitzgerald lives with his wife, Lyn, and sons, Kieran and Desmond, in the 41st Ward on the northwest side of Chicago.
Ben Fritz is technology reporter and video games editor for
Variety / Daily Variety. He co-wrote
The New York Times best-seller
All the President's Spin and co-founded the political rhetoric watchdog site Spinsanity.org. He also edits the satirical website
DatelineHollywood.com.
Nick Gillespie is editor-in-chief of
Reason, the libertarian monthly that has been named one of "The 50 Best Magazines" by the
Chicago Tribune three out of the past four years. His work has appeared in the
New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, New York Post, Slate.com, Salon.com, Time.com, National Public Radio's "Marketplace," and many other places. In 2004, he edited
Choice: The Best of Reason, an anthology of the magazine's best articles from the past decade and in 1996, he received his Ph.D. in American literature from the State University of New York at Buffalo. The father of two sons, Gillespie lives in Washington, D.C., and Oxford, Ohio.
Robin Givhan received her Bachelor of Arts in English from Princeton University and a Masters of Science in journalism from the University of Michigan. Since 1995 she has been the fashion editor of
The Washington Post where she covers the news, trends and business of the international fashion industry. Her work has also appeared in
Harper's Bazaar, American Vogue, Marie Claire and
Essence. She has contributed to several books including
Runway Madness and
No Sweat: Fashion, Free Trade and the Rights of Garment Workers. In 2006, she won the Pulitzer Prize in criticism for her fashion coverage. She lives and works in New York City.
Stephanie Glaros is art director of
Utne Reader magazine, which reprints the best articles from over 2,000 alternative media sources. Previously, she worked as an independent art director and graphic designer for a variety of clients. She has a B.A. in women's studies from the University of Montana, and an A.A.S. degree in graphic design from Minneapolis Community and Technical College. She enjoys cooking, photography, travel and reading. She proudly claims zero MySpace friends.
Joshua Glazer's journalism career began when the start-up he was selling ads for -
Real Detroit Weekly - asked him to review a techno CD for its first issue. A week later he was interviewing international stars Underworld and was hooked. Today, he is the editor and content director of Los Angeles-based
URB magazine and
URB.com. He has also freelanced for All Music Guide and iTunes.
Michael Goldberg, currently editor in chief of
MOG.com, is a distinguished pioneer in the online music space;
Newsweek magazine called him an "Internet visionary." In 1994, Goldberg founded the highly influential Addicted To Noise (ATN), the first music-oriented website with original content. He was a senior vice president and editor-in-chief at SonicNet from March 1997 through May 2000. Goldberg both initiated and oversaw the yearlong investigation that resulted in SonicNet's series "Playing With Fire: The Untold Story of Woodstock 99" which was awarded a Scripps Howard Foundation National Journalism Award for web reporting in 2001. From 1984 through 1993, Goldberg was a senior writer and associate editor at
Rolling Stone. Prior to that, he freelanced for
Esquire, Downbeat, In These Times, New Musical Express, San Francisco Chronicle, the Berkeley Barb, New Times, California magazine,
NY Rocker and numerous other publications.
Carol Goodhue is the readers' representative and training editor for
The San Diego Union-Tribune. She has happily left behind her contest-entry-preparation duties after assisting with entries that won several awards, including a Pulitzer Prize, for work by the paper and Copley News Service in uncovering bribes taken by former Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham. She has held various editing positions in news and features at the
Union-Tribune, San Jose Mercury News and
The Argus in Fremont, Calif. She holds a bachelor's degree from Stanford University and a master's degree from the University of California at Berkeley.
Terry Greene Sterling was a staff writer at
Phoenix New Times for 13 years and is now a contributing editor for
Phoenix Magazine and a contributor for
The Washington Post. Her writing has appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines through the years. Sterling is a three-time winner of Arizona's highest journalism honor-The Virg Hill Journalist of the Year Award. She teaches magazine writing at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism at Arizona State University in Tempe, Ariz.
Kevin Griffis is a former staff writer for
Creative Loafing's Atlanta newspaper. In 2002, he won the first-place AAN award in the News Story category for a piece that uncovered tens of thousands of dollars in illegal campaign contributions to then-Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell's re-election campaign. Most recently, Griffis directed communications for the Democratic U.S. Senate candidate in Arizona, and in 2005, was part of Tim Kaine's successful gubernatorial bid in Virginia.
Matthew Guemple, who primarily chose his career in graphic design as an excuse to wear "cool clothes," is currently working as the interim art director at
Rolling Stone. He remains hopeful to enjoy the kindness of strangers with exotic work in exciting locales and that someday he will again bask in a well-appointed office with functional voicemail. In his spare time he enjoys the color orange, calling people with Presidents' names "Pet," really good "bad" photography and swearing to the oldies.
Sandra Haggerty has been a journalism educator for the past 34 years. The E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University has been her academic home for 28 of those years. Haggerty's column-writing experience includes stints at the
Oakland Tribune and
Los Angeles Times. For several years, the Los Angeles Times Syndicate distributed her weekly column to newspapers across the country. Her research interests include "Youth Gang and Drug Intervention Strategies," "Using News to Reach and Teach At-Risk Youth" and "Journalism in South Africa."
Tom Hallman Jr., 51, was born and raised in Portland, Ore. His first job was in New York City as copy editor for Hearst Magazines Special Publications. He has worked as a reporter at
The Hermiston Herald in Oregon and the
Tri-City Herald in Washington before moving to
The Oregonian in 1980. He's received many awards including the Pulitzer Prize, American Society Newspaper Editors awards, National Scripps Howard Journalism Awards, National Headliner Awards and more. He has written for
Readers Digest and
Best Life Magazine. His book,
Sam: The Boy Behind the Mask, was published in 2002.
Ruth Hammond is a senior copy editor at
The Chronicle of Higher Education. Previously, she worked as editorial director at the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, and helped establish and edited the collaborative news site,
AltWeeklies.com. She also ran the AltWeekly Awards contest and was co-editor of
Best AltWeekly Writing and Design 2005, the first in a series, and editor of the "How I Got That Story" series on the association's website. She was a writer and investigative reporter for a number of weekly and daily newspapers, including
Pittsburgh City Paper and
In Pittsburgh Newsweekly, and specialized in covering issues of poverty and the Hmong refugee community.
Ray Hanania is a freelance writer and syndicated columnist with newspapers throughout the United States and the Middle East. A journalist since 1976, his main assignment included covering Chicago City Hall fulltime from 1976 through 1992. He is a two-time winner of the Chicago Headline Club (SPJ) Lisagor Award for column writing and won the 2006/2007 Best Ethnic American Columnist Award from New America Media.
Glenn Harper is editor of
Sculpture magazine, and was previously the editor of
Art Papers, an alternative arts publication based in Atlanta. He has published articles and reviews in numerous publications, including
ArtForum, Public Art Review and
Aperture, and is the editor of the anthologies
A Sculpture Reader and
Interventions and Provocations.
Alex Heard is the editorial director at
Outside magazine. He also has worked as an editor at
Wired and
The New York Times Magazine and written for various publications, including Slate.com and
The New Republic. Heard is the author of 1999's
Apocalypse Pretty Soon, a nonfiction look at millennial subcultures, and is currently writing a new one on the 1951 execution of Willie McGee, an African-American man accused of raping a white housewife in Laurel, Miss.
Mary Huhn is a features writer for the
New York Post, where she focuses mostly on music. She has also worked for
Adweek and
Mediaweek magazines as well as
Rolling Stone online. Her first first and only alt-weekly piece was printed in
The Village Voice in the late '80s and cited by
Spy magazine as an example of terrible writing in the
Voice. She's been working in journalism since she moved to New York City in 1985 from the Philadelphia suburbs.
April Hunt is the social-services reporter at the
Orlando Sentinel in Florida. Most of her career has been as a government and political reporter, most recently covering Florida's 2006 U.S. Senate race. She has worked in Florida, New York, Ohio and Puerto Rico. She holds a bachelor's degree in journalism and a master's in public administration.
Rebecca Smith Hurd, a San Francisco-based word nerd, has worked as a journalist for two decades. Most recently, as assistant managing editor of
Wired, Rebecca honed the voice of the magazine - shaping stories, smoothing language, and writing headlines. During her tenure,
Wired was nominated three times and in 2005 won the National Magazine Award for general excellence. Rebecca holds a bachelor's in journalism from San Jose State University and started her career at age 16 as a music critic for
Metro, Silicon Valley's alternative weekly. Since then, she's served as a columnist, copy editor, special issues editor, bureau chief, or managing editor at several U.S.-based magazines, newspapers, and news services. She left
Wired in March of 2006 to pursue several freelance projects, including writing a cookbook.
Todd Inoue - a Sanjaya Malakar fan - broke into the journalism game in 1992 with AAN weekly
Metro Silicon Valley where he worked as an intern, music and arts writer, calendar editor and, from 2002-2006, music editor. He currently toils with the iTunes staff in Cupertino, Calif., keeping a cramped toe in the writing game (most recently for
The Washington Post, Vibe, Hyphen and
XXL). He also maintains a soporific blog about South Bay minutiae at
youmightbefromsanjose.blogspot.com.
Neil Irwin is a reporter for the Business section of
The Washington Post, where he has worked since 2000. He writes about the U.S. economy, with particular focus on how macroeconomic trends affect a broad swath of Americans. During the 2006-2007 academic year, he was a Knight-Bagehot Fellow in Economics and Business Journalism at Columbia University in New York.
Angie Jabine edited the AAN newsletter from 1987 to 1994. She has written for
Willamette Week, The Oregonian, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Advertising Age, Audubon and other publications. In 1998, after three years as editor of Oregon Public Broadcasting's member magazine, she became the editor of
Northwest Palate, the magazine of food, wine, and travel in the Pacific Northwest. Her writing appears in
Farming and the Fate of Wild Nature (Watershed Media, 2006).
David Jackson has been a reporter for the
Chicago Tribune since 1991, except for a year at
The Washington Post, where he and three other reporters won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for public service. At the
Tribune, he has been a Pulitzer finalist for investigative and national reporting. He began his career writing for the
Chicago Reader, Haymarket and other alternative papers.
Josh Jackson is co-founder and editor-in-chief of the 2006 & 2007 Plug Awards Magazine of the Year,
Paste, which Jason Lee calls "so deliciously sweet, I often put it my waffles in the morning instead of syrup." He's been named one of
Relevant magazine's 12 Revolutionaries and one of
Georgia Trends' "40 Under 40." He's also served as a regular music and film critic for CNN Headline News and Atlanta radio station Dave-FM and serves on the alumni board for The Grady School of Journalism at the University of Georgia, where he graduated with a special focus on magazines. He's interviewed dozens of musicians and entertainers for the magazine, and his profile of actor/director Zach Braff was the October 2006 cover. Prior to launching
Paste, Jackson served as communications director for the Luke Society and freelance writer and photographer, covering assignments on six continents.
Art Janik worked at the
New York Press in 2003, writing art, theater and restaurant reviews, among other things. He recently co-organized an alternative journalism panel featuring Robert Cox (president, Media Bloggers Association); Amy Goodman (host, "Democracy Now!"); Richard Karpel (executive director, AAN); Jeff Koyen (former editor,
New York Press); and Elizabeth Spiers (founder, Gawker.com). He is currently a grant writer for New York City Center, a landmark non-profit performing arts center in midtown Manhattan.
Mary Jordan is
The Washington Post's co-bureau chief in London. She graduated from Georgetown University in 1983 and also spent a year studying Irish poetry at Trinity College in Dublin. She received a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University in 1984 and joined the
Post that year. She was a Nieman fellow at Harvard University in 1989-90. Jordan and her husband, Kevin Sullivan, were the
Post's co-bureau chiefs in Tokyo from 1995 to 1999 and Mexico City from 2000 to 2005. They won the George Polk Award in 1998 for coverage of the Asian Financial Crisis and the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for international reporting for their coverage of the Mexican criminal justice system. They are the authors of
The Prison Angel, a biography that won a 2006 Christopher Award. They have two children.
Heather Joslyn is a features editor of
The Chronicle of Philanthropy. Before that she oversaw the Arts section of
Baltimore City Paper for several years. In her spare time, she also served as the alternative weekly's managing editor. She lives in Baltimore, where she reads, watches movies, and plays the devil's music.
Cynthia Joyce is a freelance writer, editor, and web producer who has written for several local and national publications including
Creative Loafing, Gambit Weekly, Newsday, The Washington Post and
Legal Affairs, among others, and still contributes regularly to
Salon.com, where she was a founding A&E editor. In 2000, she completed a National Arts Journalism Program fellowship at Columbia University. Currently a resident of New Orleans, she maintains a blog about post-Katrina life in Louisiana called CultureGulf (
artsjournal.com/culturegulf).
Madeleine Begun Kane is a New York City-based humor columnist, recovering lawyer and musician whose columns, political song parodies and satirical poems have appeared in numerous newspapers, magazines, websites and anthologies. The National Society of Newspaper Columnists honored her work as a humor columnist in 1996. Her personal humor site,
madkane.com, has garnered awards from
USA Today, Shift Magazine, Maxim and About.com's 2005 Political Dot-Comedy Award for Best Parody.
Mollie Katzen is listed by
The New York Times as on the best-selling cookbook authors of all time with over 6 million books in print. A 2007 inductee into the prestigious James Beard Cookbook Hall of Fame, Katzen has been named by
Health magazine as one of "The Five Women Who Changed the Way We Eat." Largely credited with moving healthful vegetarian food from the "fringe" to the center of the American dinner plate, Katzen is best known as the creator of the groundbreaking classics,
Moosewood Cookbook and
The Enchanted Broccoli Forest. She writes a national food column syndicated by the
Chicago Tribune, works as a contributing editor for
SHAPE magazine and runs Mollie Katzen Designs (
molliekatzendesigns.com). In fall 2007, on the 30th anniversary of
Moosewood Cookbook, Katzen will publish her tenth book,
The Vegetables I Can't Live Without (Hyperion).
Meghan Keane is a 2006 Phillips Fellow writing a book on scandal in popular culture and a film critic for
The New York Sun.
Bryan Keefer is co-author of
The New York Times bestseller
All the President's Spin. He was founding assistant managing editor of Columbia Journalism Review's CampaignDesk.org, devoted to improving media coverage of politics, and co-founder and editor of Spinsanity.org, which was a non-partisan site devoted to debunking political spin. A freelance writer and Internet consultant, his work has appeared in publications including Salon.com and
The Washington Post.
John Kessler is a food writer for
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He got his start at an alternative weekly - Denver's
Westword - and went on to review restaurants for
The Denver Post before moving to Atlanta as chief critic. A couple of years ago he realized he wanted to cook more and eat out less, so he went from reviewing restaurants to writing a food column and general assignment features. Over the years he has lost many writing contests, including one where the judge's sole comment was "Prolix!" Of the many unnecessary words he shoehorns into his copy, this was not one of them, and so he was forced to consult a dictionary. He thinks much of the best food writing in America comes from the alternative press, whether it wins awards or not.
Paul Kiel is deputy editor of
TalkingPointsMemo.com and a reporter/blogger for the investigative blog
TPMmuckraker.com.
Erin Kissane edits
AListApart.com, an online magazine for people who make websites. She also serves as editorial director of A List Apart's publisher, Happy Cog Studios. Erin lives in Portland, Ore., with two cats and an animator.
Ken Krayeske, a freelance journalist, is enrolled in his first year of law school at Connecticut's Quinnipiac University. He holds a B.S. in magazine journalism from Syracuse University ('94). His stories and photos - from the United States, Europe, Africa, the Caribbean and the Middle East, have run in many publications, including Poynter.org,
Adbusters and
High Times. A former
Hartford Advocate writer, he later started a newspaper for Hartford students. Read his weekly column
atthe40yearplan.com.
Kiran Krishnamurthy has been a reporter at the
Richmond Times-Dispatch since 1999. He recently wrote about a Catholic priest who neighbors say was married and who police say allegedly embezzled up to $1 million. He covered the 2006 marquee election contest between then-Sen. George Allen and Democratic challenger Jim Webb, which tipped control of Congress to Democrats, and was a major contributor to the newspaper's award-winning coverage of the 2002 Beltway sniper shootings. He has won several awards and has contributed stories to
Financial Times and Reuters.
Alex Kotlowitz is the author of three books, and a regular contributor to
The New York Times Magazine and public radio's "This American Life." A former staff writer at
The Wall Street Journal, Kotlowitz began his journalism career at
The Lansing Star, an alternative weekly in Lansing, Mich. His honors include the George Foster Peabody Award, the George Polk Award and the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award. He's a writer-in-residence at Northwestern University.
Jeff Koyen is a travel writer whose work appears in
The New York Times, Penthouse, Men's Journal, Wired.com and others. In 1995, he joined
New York Press as a contributing writer; in 2002, he was hired as the associate editor of
The Prague Pill. When
New York Press was sold in 2003, Koyen was hired as the new editor-in-chief. He was forced to resign in 2005 after publishing a nasty article about the then-dying Pope.
Richard Leiby is a writer and editor at
The Washington Post. He has covered both the Oscars and the Iraq War for the Style section. He collected his first check as a journalist ($15) from the weekly
Harrisburg Independent Press (HIP) when he was 17. He then spent the next 33 years hoping to make better money while also trying to make newspaper stories less boring. He has yet to claim total success at either goal.
Thomas Leitch is professor of English and director of film studies at the University of Delaware and senior editor at
Kirkus Reviews. His most recent books are
Perry Mason and
Film Adaptation and Its Discontents: From Gone with the Wind to The Passion of the Christ.
Tim Leong is the deputy art director at
Complex Magazine. He was previously the associate art director at
Men's Health.
Josh Levin is an associate editor at
Slate.com, where he edits the magazine's sports and technology sections. Before coming to Slate, he was an editorial intern at
Washington City Paper. Levin, a native of New Orleans, now lives in Washington, D.C.
Dan Levine is a news editor at
The Recorder, a legal daily in San Francisco. He previously worked as a full time reporter at the
Hartford Advocate until 2003. He then founded an online news service in Connecticut called
ctnewsjunkie.com and freelanced for numerous media outlets, including
In These Times and
The Nation. He got his start in journalism as a
Village Voice intern.
Alan Light is the former editor-in-chief of
Vibe, Spin and
Tracks magazines, and a former senior writer at
Rolling Stone. A frequent contributor to
The New York Times, he is the author of
The Skills to Pay the Bills: The Story of the Beastie Boys.
Stephanie Grace Lim is a photo-illustrating design machine fueled by high-octane pigtails. Formerly the features design director at the
San Jose Mercury News, she is now the principle creative designer at eBay's PayPal division. She has been nationally recognized by Nikon, Society of News Design, National Press Photographers Association, Associated Press, National Headliners, and has won the Michigan College Photographer of the Year and a Pulitzer Prize nomination.
Aaron Lovell writes about high finance and real estate in New York City. He was a formerly a freelance writer and intern at the
New York Press, where he wrote about music, food and culture. His writing has also appeared in
Maximum RocknRoll, People,
The Patriot-Ledger and the Chicago
Daily Herald. This February, he co-organized a panel on the future of alternative journalism for the Medill Club of Greater New York.
Ralph Lucci is co-founder and creative director for Behavior, a premiere creative boutique shop in New York City. Previously he was creative director at i/o360 Digital Design and head of user-experience design at Rare Medium. His affinity for intense information design challenges fuels his passion for intuitive interfaces through innovative user-experiences. He has forged relationships with such diverse clients as AARP, MoMA, HBO, P-Diddy, XM Satellite Radio, Microsoft, Sony, Time Warner and
The New York Times. An active alumnus of The Cooper Union, he's spoken for the AIGA and as a guest critic at Yale University. His recent work has been showcased in
Communication Arts, ID Magazine, FORM and
Blueprint.
Mike Luckovich became the editorial cartoonist for
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 1989. Since then, he's collected many awards, including a few from National Headliner and Overseas Press Club, the National Cartoonists Society's Rueben Award for Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year, plus a couple of Pulitzer Prizes. His work is syndicated in 150 newspapers and his most recent book is
Four More Wars!.
Courtney Macavinta has been in online media for more than 12 years and her articles have been published by CNET, News.com,
The Washington Post, Wired News, Business 2.0, The Associated Press and other publications. She's co-author of the best-selling book for teens,
RESPECT: A Girl's Guide to Getting Respect and Dealing When Your Line Is Crossed, publishes a blog,
RespectRx.com, and is the former editorial director of ChickClick.com. As an expert on girls' and women's issues, she's been featured on CNN, Fox, National Public Radio, and in
USA Today, CosmoGIRL!, Teen People, Teen Vogue, The Seattle Times, the
San Jose Mercury News and others. She lives in San Jose, Calif.
Brady McCombs has been the
Arizona Daily Star's border and immigration reporter since February 2006. He co-wrote the award-winning four-part investigative series "Illegal Labor Fix Falls Short" and "Securing our Border: Why it Won't Work." He is fluent in Spanish and lived three years in Costa Rica.
Duff McDonald is a contributing editor to
Conde Nast Portfolio magazine. He writes for a variety of other publications as well, including
Vanity Fair, New York magazine, and
Wired. A Canadian, he lives in Bronxville, N.Y., with his wife, Caroline and their beagle, Sally.
Tara McKelvey, a senior editor at
The American Prospect, is the author of an upcoming book,
Monstering: Inside America's Policy on Secret Interrogations and Torture in the Terror War (Carroll & Graf, June). She is also a research fellow at New York University School of Law's Center on Law and Security and a frequent contributor to
The New York Times Book Review. She lives in Washington, D.C.
John Mecklin is the editor of
High Country News, a Colorado-based news magazine that covers the environment, politics and culture of the western U.S. In earlier lives, he was editor of two alt-weeklies,
SF Weekly and
Phoenix New Times, and an investigative reporter at the
Houston Post, a 400,000-circulation daily, for which he also covered the Persian Gulf War from Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
Jennifer Mendelsohn is a seasoned feature writer specializing in entertainment. Mendelsohn was a longtime D.C.-based special correspondent for
People and a humor columnist for Slate.com; her work has also appeared in numerous national publications including
USA Today, USA Weekend, Country Music, The Washington Post, Worth and
Family Circle. A sought-after ghostwriter for celebrity books, Mendelsohn has also taught magazine journalism at Baltimore's Villa Julie College.
Jack Nelson, a newsman for more than 50 years, retired in 2003 after 38 years with the
Los Angeles Times, including 22 years as Washington bureau chief. He began his career on the Biloxi
Daily Herald in 1947, then served 12 years as an investigative reporter for
The Atlanta Constitution where he won a Pulitzer Prize for exposing wrongdoing at Milledgeville (Ga.) State Hospital, then the world's largest mental hospital. He studied at Harvard under a Nieman Fellowship in 1961-62 and again in 2003 under a Shorenstein Fellowship. He's the author of
Terror in the Night: The Klan's Campaign Against the Jews, and is co-author of three books, including
The Orangeburg Massacre and
The FBI and the Berrigans: The Making of a Conspiracy. He lives in Bethesda, Md., with his wife, Barbara Matusow, also a retired journalist.
Phil Nesbitt has been involved with print media for 39 years and has consulted with, restructured and redesigned more than 40 newspapers and magazines around the world. He began working at weekly unit tabloid newspapers and from 1976 to 1981, he was chief of the U.S. Army's newspaper program. Nesbitt also has worked at
The Record (N.J.),
Singapore Monitor, Singapore News Publications, Ltd.,
Chicago Sun-Times and the American Press Institute. He also served as past president of the Society for News Design, led design discussions for API and Poynter Institute for Media Studies, and taught at Loyola University in Chicago. He currently works as a consultant for media and publishing organizations.
Andrew Adam Newman is a frequent contributor to
The New York Times. His work has appeared in
New York magazine, Salon.com and on National Public Radio's "Studio 360" with Kurt Andersen. He served as editor of
Pittsburgh City Paper, In Pittsburgh Newsweekly and
Boise Weekly, and as news editor of
Casco Bay Weekly. He won a national AltWeekly Award in the Arts Feature category in 2003. He served on the board of AAN for five years, which is about how long each meeting seemed to last. He lives in New York. Visit him at
andrewadamnewman.com.
Chris Nolan is the founder of
Spot-on.com, a web-based syndication service that provides news outlets with independent, intelligent and insightful commentary and analysis on current events and social issues. The site, founded in 2003, is the current home of 11 writers. As Spot-on's founder and editor, Nolan speaks and writes frequently on the impact of stand-alone journalism - a phrase she has coined to describe the work that experienced and professional writers are doing on the web - and how the networked news environment is changing journalism. Her writing has appeared in
The Washington Post, The New Republic, Fortune, Business 2.0 and Conde Nast Traveler. Before moving to San Francisco 10 years ago to cover Silicon Valley, Nolan lived and worked in Washington, D.C., and covered Congress and the FCC. She holds a B.A. from Barnard College, Columbia University.
James Norton is a freelance writer who blogs about food for
Chow.com. He's the founder of the arts, culture and politics magazine
Flak (
flakmag.com) and the author of
Saving General Washington (2006, Tarcher). He lives in Minneapolis with his fiancée.
Chad Oliveiri is a reformed alternative journalist now steeped in instructional design. He worked for eight years as the features editor/managing editor of
City Newspaper in Rochester, N.Y. During Chad's time at
City, the paper was a regular AltWeekly Award winner, particularly in the music-writing category.
Geneva Overholser holds the Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Reporting in the Missouri School of Journalism's Washington bureau. She is former editor of
The Des Moines Register, which won a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service under her direction. She has been ombudsman of
The Washington Post, a member of the editorial board of
The New York Times, a syndicated columnist and a blogger for the Poynter Institute. She spent five years overseas, freelancing from Kinshasa and Paris.
Michael Parenti is an internationally acclaimed, award-winning author, scholar and social commentator who has published some 275 articles (including an occasional contribution to alternative weeklies) and 20 books, including his most recent ones:
The Culture Struggle (2006),
Superpatriotism (2004),
The Assassination of Julius Caesar (2003), and
Contrary Notions: The Michael Parenti Reader (2007). He lectures frequently in North America and abroad, and has appeared on many radio and television talk shows. For further information, visit
michaelparenti.org.
Cheryl Phillips is a deputy investigations editor at
The Seattle Times. She also worked as an investigative reporter at
The Times from 2002 through 2006. The coverage on problems in security provided by the Transportation Security Administration won the national Society for Professional Journalists SDX award for investigative reporting in 2004. She was part of a reporting team on
The Seattle Times' "Your Courts, Their Secrets" series, which was a finalist for the Pulitzer in investigative reporting this year. She also was part of a team that reported on the Washington, D.C., sniper suspects in 2002. That coverage was a Pulitzer finalist in the breaking news category. Previously, she has worked as computer-assisted reporting editor for
USA Today's sports section, as a CAR projects editor at
The Detroit News, worked at the
Great Falls Tribune in Montana and at the
Fort Worth Star-Telegram in Texas. In Texas, she covered stadium issues of the Texas Rangers baseball team and wrote about then-team owner George W. Bush. She also is vice president of the board of Investigative Reporters and Editors.
Ryan Pitts is online director for
The Spokesman-Review, guiding the development of
spokesmanreview.com,
spokane7.com and other niche websites. He's been working online since 2001, helping the Spokane, Wash., newspaper find new ways to do journalism and connect with readers.
Dale Pollock served eight years as the dean of the School of Filmmaking at the North Carolina School of the Arts, where he is now a professor in Cinema Studies and Aesthetics. He is president of Peak Productions and Green Street Productions, and has produced 13 features films, four of which were nominated for Academy Awards. A writer at heart, Pollock began his career as the entertainment editor of the
Santa Cruz Sentinel, and later worked at
Daily Variety and the
Los Angeles Times. He has published pieces in magazines such as
Esquire, GQ, People and
Rolling Stone. In 1984, he published
Skywalking: The Life and Films of George Lucas, currently in its third edition and fourth printing. He is currently at work on a historical novel and an academic film book.
James Poniewozik is the television and media critic for
Time magazine and writes the "Culture Complex" column about pop culture and society, as well as the blog Tuned In for
time.com. Before he moved to
Time, he was the media columnist for Salon.com. His work has appeared in
The New York Times, Fortune, Rolling Stone and other magazines; on National Public Radio; and in the comments sections of finer blogs everywhere. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and lives in Brooklyn.
Cory Powell is assistant managing editor for design and readership at the
Star Tribune in Minneapolis. He was one of the architects of the Star Tribune's 2005 redesign and has also led redesigns at the
Charlotte Observer and
Columbus (Ga.)
Ledger-Enquirer. In nearly two decades in newspapers, he has been a designer, copy editor, copy desk chief and news editor. He lives in Eagan, Minn., with his wife, Kristen, and two children, Cole and Carson.
Bruce Ramsay is
Newsweek's director of covers and the Society of Publication Designers' president. He has art directed
Spin, Lear's and
Saturday Night magazines. His career includes the design of a newsweekly for Murdoch Magazine Development and AAD at
Esquire. He designed The Art of Fashion Photography for
Aperture, Naomi Campbell's book,
Naomi, and
Hardcore Rap for Universe/Rizzoli. He teaches courses on magazine design and porfolio presentation at the Fashion Institute of Technology.
Eric Reynolds is an editor for Seattle's Fantagraphics Books and a cartoonist whose work has appeared in
The New York Times, The Stranger, Mojo, The Ganzfeld and elsewhere. For Fantagraphics, he has edited books by Robert Crumb, Robert Williams, Johnny Ryan, Joe Coleman, Michael Kupperman and Gene Deitch. He is also the editor of the quarterly lit anthology
Mome. As a cartoon character, he has cameo'd in "The Simpsons" television show as well as comic books ranging from
Hate and
Eightball to
Aliens (where he was gruesomely eviscerated).
Sara Roahen's work has appeared in several publications, including
Tin House, Oxford American and
Food & Wine magazines. Her book,
Gumbo Tales: Finding My Place At The New Orleans Table, will be published by WW Norton next winter. She and her husband own a home in New Orleans. They pay rent in Philadelphia.
Dennis Roddy is a reporter and - until he took a year-long hiatus to let his knowledge base catch up with his opinion base - a columnist at the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He began working for newspapers in 1974 to help pay his college tuition. Upon graduating, he took an aptitude test, hoping to become a literature professor, and discovered he was ideally suited to journalism. In the course of 33 years, he has won the usual assortment of awards in a profession that has more awards than a state fair. He has been married twice, but only after the first one ended in divorce, thus keeping him off "Anderson Cooper 360." He is the father of four children and is married to Joyce Gannon, a business writer for the
Post-Gazette who he somehow conned into marrying him. In the course of his career, he has received numerous offers to leave Pittsburgh, most of them from other residents of Pittsburgh. He prefers, however, to remain in a city where, to paraphrase Brendan Behan, "all my enemies are nearby, so it's very cozy."
Bruce Rodgers was editor of
PitchWeekly from 1993 to 2000 in Kansas City, Mo. He currently is co-owner of Discovery Publications Inc. in Kansas City, which publishes
Discover Mid-America, a monthly regional specialty newspaper (print/online) and eKC online, an alternative online publication (
kcactive.com).
Bleys W. Rose is a general assignment reporter for
The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.). Previously, he was a bureau chief at the
Hartford Courant and a reporter for
The Kansas City Star. He was a member of
The Star staff that received the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Hyatt Hotel skywalk collapse. He has covered political and immigration issues, reporting from Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala.
Matthew Rose is a page-one editor for
The Wall Street Journal, a job he started in spring 2004. He joined the
Journal in 1995 and worked for its European edition in London before moving to New York as the paper's publishing and media reporter in 1999. He is a graduate of Merton College, Oxford, and Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies in Bologna, Italy and Washington, D.C. He currently lives in Virginia.
Jandos Rothstein is an assistant professor of graphic design at George Mason University, and design director of
Governing Magazine, a national publication about trends in local and state government. He recently finished editing his first book,
Designing Magazines, due in November from Allworth Press. He has also written for
Print Magazine, Voice: The AIGA Journal of Design, I.D. and other publications. Jandos misses the thrill of designing an alt-weekly, but on balance is happier seeing his family on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings.
Heath Row joined DoubleClick Inc. as research manager in September 2006 to study the impact of new technology on advertising - and vice versa. To date, he has authored several research reports, including "Touchpoints IV: How Digital Media Fit into Consumer Purchase Decisions," and "Influencing the Influencers: How Online Advertising and Media Impact Word of Mouth." Between August 2005 and his move to DoubleClick, Heath worked as senior director of community development for Squidoo, a content-sharing platform founded by Seth Godin. Previously, he served as an editor and writer for
Fast Company magazine for roughly eight years. At
Fast Company, he founded the Company of Friends, the magazine's global readers' network, and FC Now, the
Fast Company team blog. While at
Fast Company, he subscribed to most of the major alt-weeklies; he's particularly fond of
The Austin Chronicle.
Mike Sager started his career in journalism as an intern at
Creative Loafing in Atlanta. Currently, he is a writer-at-large for
Esquire. A collection of his articles,
Scary Monsters and Super Freaks: Stories of Sex, Drugs, Rock 'n Roll and Murder, was a
Los Angeles Times bestseller. His second collection,
Revenge of the Donut Boys: True Stories of Lust, Fame, Survival and Multiple Personality, will be published by Thunder's Mouth in September 2007. His first novel,
Deviant Behavior, will be published by Grove/Atlantic in winter 2008.
Jason Salzman is a media critic for the
Rocky Mountain News and the author of
Making the News: A Guide for Activists and Nonprofits. With Ben Cohen of Ben and Jerry's, he wrote
50 Ways YOU Can Show George the Door in 2004. His articles have been published in
The Chronicle of Philanthropy, The Christian Science Monitor, Newsweek, Sierra, Westword, and others. He runs Cause Communications, which offers media assistance to nonprofit and activist groups.
Dave Scantland is an Atlanta-based writer and designer with 25 years' experience in marketing, communications and identity, but his journalistic experience dates back to high school in 1971, when he established a bi-weekly alternative to the student council-sponsored paper. A former musician, cook and printer, he has worked for a number of global high-tech firms, as well as for the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, where he currently serves as director of operations.
Norborne Schaum graduated from Auburn University 25 years ago (yikes!) with a B.F.A. in design. He's produced print, OOH and TV in Atlanta primarily, as a full-time and freelance A.D. on accounts like Quikrete Concrete, Popeyes Chicken & Biscuits, The United Way, Georgia Pacific, Longhorn Steaks, on and on and others. He has had his butt planted at Fitzgerald and Co. as an A.C.D. working on Coca-Cola. He's won some awards along the way, and tried to have some fun along the way too.
Michael Scherer is the Washington correspondent for Salon.com. Previously, he had been the Washington correspondent for
Mother Jones, an assistant editor at
Columbia Journalism Review, an editorial fellow at
Mother Jones, and an education reporter for the
Daily Hampshire Gazette (Northampton, Mass.).
David Schimke is the editor-in-chief of
Utne Reader, a digest of independent ideas and alternative journalism. After graduating from the University of Minnesota, he spent three years writing at the now-defunct
Twin Cities Reader before spending the next eight working for
City Pages in Minneapolis as both an editor and writer. His political reporting, media analysis, arts criticism and feature writing was honored on three occasions by the AAN and garnered a half-dozen Page One Awards from the Society of Professional Journalists.
Bruce Schimmel is the founding publisher of
Philadelphia City Paper. As editor emeritus, he currently writes the column "Loose Canon," which in 2006 won second place statewide in the Keystone Press Awards and placed third in the Society of Professional Journalists, Keystone State Professional Chapter. Schimmel has produced regular cultural and enterprise radio pieces for WSCL-FM (National Public Radio affiliate, Salisbury, Md.). In 2003, he started Sonic Squad, a radio-reporting project for children in rapidly developing rural Delaware. Schimmel is currently producing an audio history project called "Show and Tell" for the Milton (Del.) Historical Society. His radio productions have been broadcast nationally on the Pacifica radio network, NPR's "All Things Considered," "Living on Earth," "Justice Talking," and on "Pulse of the Planet." Since 1999, Schimmel has received more than a dozen Associated Press regional awards in nearly every radio category.
Phil Semas has been editor-in-chief of The Chronicle of Higher Education Inc. since 2002. He oversees all editorial and business operations of the company, including
The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, their websites, and the website Arts & Letters Daily. Before becoming editor-in-chief, he served for seven years as editor of new media for
The Chronicle. He oversaw all online activities by both newspapers, including their websites and e-mail newsletters.
The Chronicle of Higher Education's website has won numerous awards.
The Chronicle and its website have also been nominated for eight National Magazine Awards. Semas is the founding editor of
The Chronicle of Philanthropy, which began publication in 1988. He edited the newspaper for its first seven years. He began his career at
The Chronicle as a reporter in 1969 and served as managing editor from 1978 to 1988.
Craig Seymour lives in Providence, R.I., and is a writer, photographer and an English professor at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He is the author of the biography
Luther: The Life and Longing of Luther Vandross and a forthcoming memoir on Atria Books. He has also written numerous articles for
The Washington Post, Entertainment Weekly, Vibe, The Village Voice and other publications.
Geoff Shandler is vice president and editor-in-chief of Little, Brown. He has worked with, among others, Sir Harold Evans, William Greider, Robert Wright, Susan Orlean, William Least Heat-Moon, Jeff Gerth, Don Van Natta Jr., Christopher Drew and Tom Shales. He has written for
The New Yorker, The American Scholar, The New York Times Magazine and others. He lives just outside of New York City.
Choire Sicha is the managing editor of
Gawker.com, and a former senior editor at
The New York Observer. He has also written often for the
Los Angeles Times and
The New York Times on arts and culture folks.
Sam Sifton is the culture editor of
The New York Times, where he has worked since 2001. He was formerly a writer and editor for
New York Press. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife, Tina Fallon, and their two daughters.
Julia Simon is a writer and Internet nerd who has worked on the websites of
Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping and, most recently,
Spin, where she served as the assistant online editor. Her work has appeared on
SPIN.com, on various music-oriented eZines, and on Twixtmagazine.com, where she is a founding editor.
Spin, SOMA and other publications have also set her words to ink in their pages.
Stephanie Simon has been a staff writer for the
Los Angeles Times for 14 years, covering a variety of news and feature beats. For the past eight years, she has worked for the national staff, first as a regional correspondent based in St. Louis and now as a faith beat reporter based in Denver.
Michael Skube teaches journalism at Elon University in North Carolina. In 22 years in daily newspapers - at the
Winston-Salem Journal, Raleigh News & Observer and
Atlanta Journal-Constitution - he covered politics, wrote editorials, book criticism, feature stories and a general interest column. He is a winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism, the American Society of Newspaper Editors Award for Commentary and a James Beard Foundation Award. His work has appeared in the
Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic and
Fortune, among other publications.
Peter Smith is an associate editor at
Nerve.com, and considers himself very lucky to have the job. He grew up in Massachusetts and now lives in Brooklyn.
Gabriel Snyder is a senior writer at
W magazine based in Los Angeles. Previously he has been a film reporter for
Variety and a media columnist at
The New York Observer.
Rachel Sobel is a doctor who is training to be an ophthalmologist at Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia. Her writing has appeared in
U.S. News and World Report, where she was formerly on staff, as well as the
Los Angeles Times, National Public Radio and
The New England Journal of Medicine, among others.
Carolyn Ruff Spellman is senior editor at the Casey Journalism Center on Children and Families, a nonprofit, nonpartisan program of the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism, which inspires and recognizes exemplary reporting on children and families. Carolyn edits the
CJC Summary and works on content for the website. Before joining CJC in 2004, she worked as a journalist for 10 years. She has freelanced for
People magazine; written numerous feature articles for
The Washington Post and other publications; and oversaw a national literacy program.
David Sterritt is chairman of the National Society of Film Critics and emeritus professor of theater and film at Long Island University. He was film critic of
The Christian Science Monitor for more than 35 years until he retired and moved to Baltimore in 2005. His most recent book is
Guiltless Pleasures: A David Sterritt Film Reader. Many years ago he was editor of
Boston After Dark, now known as the
Boston Phoenix.
Joe Strupp is a senior editor at
Editor & Publisher, where he covers general assignment stories on everything from foreign news to features, profiles, journalism issues and business. Before joining
E&P in 1999, Strupp worked at several newspapers including the
Daily Journal, The Argus, S.F. Independent and the
Press-Enterprise in Riverside, Calif. He has freelanced for Salon.com,
Mediaweek, New Jersey Monthly, NJ Biz and
Your Sunday Visitor.
Chris Suellentrop writes "The Opinionator" for
The New York Times. He has written features for
The New York Times Magazine, New York, Wired, Radar, Legal Affairs and
The Wilson Quarterly, and he has written reviews and op-eds for
The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and
The New York Observer, among other publications. He spent five years as a staff writer and editor at Slate.com, lastly as the online magazine's 2004 campaign correspondent. He lives in the Boston neighborhood of Jamaica Plain.
Julie Sullivan is an enterprise reporter at
The Oregonian in Portland, Ore. She shared the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for exposing flaws in the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Her report on the families of children with autism, "This is How We Live,'' won the national Sigma Delta Chi Award for Excellence in Journalism. Sullivan has also won the American Society of Newspaper Editors Best Newspaper Writing award, four first-place Blethen Awards, and dozens of other awards for enterprise, government and investigative reporting. She is the co-author of
Expecting Miracles, On the Path of Hope From Infertility to Parenthood with Dr. Christo Zouves. She is married to Jim Springhetti, a designer at
The Oregonian. They have two children, Joe and Rose.
Kylee Swenson is an editor at
Remix magazine, an electronic, hip-hop and rock production and performance-based magazine. Swenson oversees artist coverage and assigns, edits and writes while trying to pick artists' brains for studio tips. She was a former editor at
URB, Guitar Player, Keyboard, MC2 and Sonicnet/MTV. In addition, she's written for
Rolling Stone, VIBE, Maxim, Wired, Blender and other publications. Swenson spends the rest of her time producing music in her Pro Tools-based studio and playing live with her band Loquat.
Silja J.A. Talvi is a multiple award-winning investigative journalist and essayist with credits in over 75 publications, including
The Nation, AlterNet.org,
Santa Fe Reporter, Salon.com and
The Christian Science Monitor. She is a senior editor at
In These Times magazine and is finishing a book about women in prison (Seal Press/Avalon/Perseus), to be published in fall 2007.
Cary Tennis was on the staff of the
SF Weekly in its very early days, has been a music journalist and a freelancer, and is currently the advice columnist for
Salon.com.
Michael Tisserand's first childhood writing was a comic titled "Detective Snorkel." Failing to get recognition for his work, he turned his back on illustration and, 30 years later, became an AAN editor. As editor of
Gambit Weekly in New Orleans for seven years, he increased the comics presence in the paper by frequently commissioning work by Harvey Pekar, Greg Peters, Bunny Matthews and others as cover stories and in cover story packages. Now a writer based in Evanston, Ill., Tisserand is author of the music book
The Kingdom of Zydeco (Arcade Publishing) and the new
Sugarcane Academy: How a New Orleans Teacher and his Storm-Struck Students Created a School to Remember (Harcourt).
Lawrence Toppman has been the movie critic of
The Charlotte Observer since 1987. Before that, he covered live theater, classical music and pop music for
The Observer and the now-defunct
Charlotte News. He has sung with the chorus of Opera Carolina for 24 seasons.
Phillip Torrone is senior editor of
MAKE and runs the award-winning
makezine.com blog. He is an author, artist and engineer based in New York City and has authored and contributed to numerous books on mobile devices, multimedia and hacks. He writes daily on the MAKE blog, which attracts millions of visitors each month. In his spare time he's a contributing editor to
Popular Science magazine and also runs a high-powered laser cutter business that voids warranties on consumer electronics.
Jason Treat is the art director for
The Atlantic Monthly magazine and is based in Washington, D.C. While he would be hard-pressed to call
The Atlantic "alternative," he is a devoted reader of alt-weeklies.
Lars Trodson is currently a writer for Griffin Bodi & Krause, one of New England's premier communications firms. He was a newspaper writer and editor for 20 years - most recently a movie critic for
The Wire in Portsmouth, N.H. He is a published essayist, short-story writer, poet and produced playwright. His award-winning short film,
The Listeners, is currently making the festival circuit.
Coury Turczyn helped create that esteemed bastion of alternative journalismness,
Metro Pulse, of Knoxville, Tenn., in 1991. After editing the multi-AAN-award-winner for nine years, the resulting bare shell of a man decided to launch himself into the heady world of freelance writing and webzine creation. He spent several years writing numerous fluffy articles (which were consequently made even fluffier) for Time Inc. publications and launching PopCultMag.com (which he really should have made into a blog, like his pal had suggested before blogs were big, thus becoming a millionaire in the process. Oh well.). He later entered the corporate web-slinging worlds of CNET, Comcast, and finally, HGTV, where he has learned more about kitchen-remodeling trends than most humans should be permitted to know. He profusely apologizes to all the worthy competitors for whom he failed to write comments.
Audrey Van Buskirk loathes tattoos and all forms of body piercing, so after nearly 15 successful years editing at alternative weeklies in Portland, Ore., Santa Fe, N.M., and Seattle, she found no alternative but to leave that world for the unblemished skin of the twice weekly
Portland Tribune where she edits the features, arts and entertainment, and environmental sections. If she meets her deadline, she will deliver a second child one week before the 2007 AAN conference begins.
Tracy Van Slyke is the publisher of the Chicago-based
In These Times, a national, award-winning monthly magazine of progressive news, analysis and cultural reporting. Van Slyke has dedicated her career as a journalist, communications professional and media producer to building an independent media infrastructure.
Jeremy Voas has served as editor-in-chief of
Phoenix New Times and Detroit's
Metro Times. He currently is an investigator for the federal public defender in Arizona.
Rob Walker writes the weekly "Consumed" column for
The New York Times Magazine, and is the proprietor of the consumer/marketing/culture website, murketing.com/journal. From 2000 to 2003, he wrote a column for Slate.com, and contributed to many other publications, from
The New Republic to
The Wall Street Journal. Prior to that he was an editor for
The New York Times Magazine, Money and
The American Lawyer. He is the author of
Letters From New Orleans (Garrett County Press; 2005).
Margaret Walter joined the University of Missouri-Columbia faculty in August 2003 as an assistant professor/news editor at the
Columbia Missourian. Previously she had been features editor at the
Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram. She is a graduate of Ball State University in Muncie, Ind., with Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degrees in journalism. She has served as wire editor, news editor, business editor, assistant Sunday editor and Sunday editor at
The Telegraph/The Sunday Telegraph in Nashua, N.H.; city government, business and economic development reporter at
The Anderson (Ind.)
Bulletin; features reporter at
The Kokomo (Ind.)
Tribune; and stints as editor at two weekly newspapers. She is a former president of the New Hampshire Press Association and of the New England Associated Press News Executives Association. She is a member of the American Copy Editors Society.
Simon Warner is lecturer, journalist and broadcaster who has taught popular music at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom since 1994. A live rock reviewer for
The Guardian between 1992 an 1995, he is now senior teaching fellow in the university's School of Music. His publications include
Rockspeak: The Language of Rock and Pop (1996), a chapter in
Remembering Woodstock (2004) and, as editor, the collection
Howl for Now: A Celebration of Allen Ginsberg's Epic Protest Poem (2005). He was a featured columnist for the online webzine PopMatters.com from 2001-2006 and is a regular commentator on rock topics for the BBC.
Gwynne Watkins is an associate editor of two online magazines: the pop-culture website
Nerve.com and the irreverent parenting site
Babble.com. She frequently writes for Nerve about film, current events and popular culture. She is also a playwright and a member of the Dramatists Guild.
Steve Weinberg is a freelance magazine writer, nonfiction book author and part-time teacher at the University of Missouri Journalism School.
David Weir, editor-in-chief at Keep Media, has worked previously as a reporter and editor at
Rolling Stone, California, Mother Jones, Business 2.0, SunDance, Stanford Social Innovation Review, 7x7 and Pacific News Service; and at the Center for Investigative Reporting, which he co-founded in 1977. He's also been an executive at KQED, Wired Digital, Salon.com, and Excite@Home. He's published hundreds of articles, three books, and taught journalism for over 20 years at U-C (Berkeley), Stanford and San Francisco State.
David Whelan is a staff writer at
Forbes, based in New York. He writes about health care, technology and philanthropy. Recent stories have focused on NutriSystem, Marvell, Qualcomm, Intel, AMD, Soitec, Google, Synaptics, Yahoo and Electronic Arts. He also co-manages the Midas List, an annual ranking of the top venture capitalists and other tech dealmakers. Prior to joining
Forbes, Whelan was a business writer for the
Contra Costa Times, where he also covered the recall campaign that made Arnold Schwarzenegger governor. He has also been on staff at
The Chronicle of Philanthropy, American Demographics and Inside.com. From 1999 through 2000, he was an analyst with First Manhattan Consulting Group, working with banks on mergers, risk management and retail strategy. Whelan earned an A.B. in economics, with honors, from Harvard University (1999).
Donald R. Winslow has worked for three decades as a photojournalist, picture editor and writer. Today he is the editor of
News Photographer magazine, the monthly publication of the National Press Photographers Association (
nppa.org). He's been a senior photographer for Reuters in Washington, D.C., covering the White House, Capitol Hill and major league sports during the George H.W. Bush and William J. Clinton presidencies, and was a photographer and editor at the
Palm Beach Post, Pittsburgh Press, Milwaukee Journal Co., and at two small newspapers in Indiana;
The Republic and the
Wabash Plain Dealer.
Todd Woody is an assistant managing editor at
Business 2.0 in San Francisco and writes for
Green Wombat, a blog that covers the intersection of the environment, technology, business and policy. Woody formerly was the business editor of the
San Jose Mercury News in Silicon Valley and worked as a senior writer and senior editor at
The Industry Standard magazine in San Francisco. He covered environmental issues for seven years at
The Recorder, a San Francisco legal daily, and wrote about the environment and technology from Sydney, Australia, for
Wired magazine and other publications.
Joanna Yas is the editor of
Open City Magazine & Books and a contributing editor of Moistworks, a music website. She also works as a freelance editor for a variety of publishers, and is a literature advisor for
Creative Capital and
The Kitchen. She lives in New York City.
Matthew Yglesias is a staff writer at
The American Prospect. Currently, he is on-leave working on his as-yet untitled book about the Democratic Party's search for a post-9/11 foreign policy that will be published by John Wiley & Sons sometime after he finishes writing it. His writing has appeared in
The New York Times Magazine, Slate.com,
Moment and other publications. He is a frequent commentator on radio programs around the nation and at one point was an infrequent television commentator until he said the cable news networks were doing "a terrible job" of covering the Terry Schiavo story live on MSNBC. Since that time, he has appeared on what he was assured was a major television network in South Korea.
Jeffrey Young reports on health care, lobbying and politics for
The Hill, a newspaper that covers Congress. He joined the publication in March 2005 from
Health News Daily, an online health care policy and politics newsletter. Young graduated from the College of William & Mary with a degree in English literature and is a native of the Philadelphia area. He currently resides in Washington, D.C.
Shawn Zeller is a senior writer with
Congressional Quarterly. He's worked previously for
National Journal and
Government Executive magazines. He is a Harvard College graduate.
Cory Zurowski began his alternative newspaper career as a staff writer at Des Moines'
Cityview in the mid-'90s. He worked at AAN headquarters in Washington, D.C., as the association's editor for about a year in 1998-99. He now raises magnolia trees and nutria at his bucolic abode in Stevensville, Md.