Edward Kosner

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Edward Kosner (born July 26. 1937)[1] is an American journalist and author who served as the top editor of Newsweek, New York and Esquire magazines and the New York Daily News during a forty-five-year career. He is the author of a memoir, “It’s News to Me,” published in 2006,[2][3] and is a frequent book reviewer for the Wall Street Journal. He lives in New York and on Amelia Island on the Atlantic coast of northern Florida.

Early life

Kosner was born in New York City, the son of Sidney Kosner, a salesman for a men’s and boy’s outerwear manufacturer, and Annalee Fisher Kosner, a housewife. Growing up in Washington Heights in upper Manhattan, he was the editor of his elementary and junior high school newspapers. At 16, he enrolled at City College, where was editor-in-chief of the undergraduate newspaper, the Campus, and the CCNY correspondent for The New York Times.[2]

Journalism career

On graduation from CCNY in 1958, Kosner joined the New York Post, then a liberal tabloid owned by Dorothy Schiff.,[2][4] He spent five years at the paper, working on night rewrite, as a series writer, and as an assistant city editor. In 1963, he was hired by Newsweek as a writer in the National Affairs section. His first cover story was on Jacqueline Kennedy’s new life after the assassination of her husband.[5] Over the next fifteen years, Kosner wrote more than a score of cover stories, started a section on urban problems, and held all the top editorial positions on the magazine under Osborn Elliott. He directed the magazine’s extensive coverage of the Watergate scandal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon in 1974.[2]

In 1975, at 37, he was named editor of Newsweek.[6] During his editorship, the magazine set records for advertising and circulation. But he was dismissed by the magazine’s owner, Katharine Graham in 1979,[7] one of five editors of Newsweek she would fire between 1970 and 1984.

Early in 1980, Rupert Murdoch hired Kosner to edit New York magazine, which he had taken over from founder Clay Felker three years earlier.[8] Kosner ran New York for thirteen years, responsible for the business side as well as the editorial side for the second half of his tenure. During his time at New York, the magazine set records for advertising sales and profits and won several National Magazine Awards. While at New York, Kosner served a two-year term as president of the American Society of Magazine Editors. In 1991, Murdoch sold New York and other magazines to a group headed by financier Henry Kravis, Two years later, Kosner left to take the editorship of Esquire, the men’s magazine, which he ran until 1997.[9][10]

The next year, Kosner joined the New York Daily News, the largest tabloid in the U.S., to create and edit a new Sunday edition.[11] In 2000, Mortimer B. Zuckerman, the News’s owner, promoted him to editor-in-chief of the daily paper.[12] Over the next four years, Mr. Kosner oversaw the tabloid’s coverage of a run of major stories, including the “tied” 2000 Presidential election between George W. Bush and Al Gore, on page one for forty consecutive days, the 9/11 attack and its aftermath, and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Mr. Kosner retired from the News in 2004 after a falling out with Mr. Zuckerman.[12] In 2006, he published his journalistic memoir, “It’s News to Me.” He began reviewing books for the Wall Street Journal in 2007.[13]

Personal life

Kosner married Alice Nadel in 1959. They had two children, John, born in 1960, and Anthony, born in 1962. The couple was divorced in 1977.[1] Since 1978, Kosner has been married to Julie Baumgold, a novelist and magazine writer.[14] Their daughter, Lily, was born in 1981. He has six grandchildren.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Marquis Who’s Who
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 “It’s News to Me,” New York, Thunder’s Mouth Press, 2006
  3. ”New York Confidential,” NY Times Sunday Book Review, Oct. 1, 2006.
  4. “1959 F.B.I. Search of Room of a Newsman is Reported.” NY Times, July 21. 1975
  5. “Jacqueline Kennedy—Looking Ahead,” Newsweek, January 6, 1964
  6. “Kosner Appointed Newsweek Editor,” NY Times, July 31, 1975
  7. “Newsweek Names New Editor,” NY Times, June 28, 1979
  8. “Kosner, Former Editor of Newsweek, Chosen as Editor of New York,” NY Times, March 1, 1980
  9. “Three Editors Go to Esquire,” NY Times, Dec.6, 1993
  10. “Hearst Names New Top Editor to Turn Esquire Around,” NY Times, May 30, 1997
  11. “Sunday News Gets Bigger,” NY Times, Feb. 22, 1999
  12. 12.0 12.1 Jacques Steinburg, “Editor of Daily News to Retire in March”, New York Times. July 23, 2003
  13. “Celebrity Society’s Secret History,” Wall Street Journal, April 12. 2007
  14. ”Edward Kosner of Newsweek Weds Julie Baumgold, Writer,” NY Times, Nov. 20, 1978

External links