Categories: OLD Media Moves

Ezra Klein leaving Washington Post

Greg Schneider, national economy and business editor at The Washington Post, sent out the following announcement to the staff on Tuesday:

We regret to announce that Ezra Klein, Melissa Bell and Dylan Matthews are leaving The Post for a new venture.

All three were instrumental in two of The Post’s most successful digital initiatives, Wonkblog and Know More. We plan to continue building those brands and expanding their reach, and we’ll have some exciting announcements related to them in the coming days.

When Ezra joined us in 2009, he was a wunderkind blogger with brash confidence and a burning desire to write a column in the print newspaper. As he leaves us, Ezra is still a brash wunderkind, but now his burning desire has a grander scope: He is looking to start his own news organization, an ambition that befits someone with uncommon gifts of perception and analysis. Ezra’s passion and drive will be missed, but we will take pride in watching him chart out his new venture.

Melissa has played a pivotal role in our digital strategy. As director of platforms, Melissa worked with the embedded developers to introduce WordPress as a secondary CMS, allowing for much of the development experimentation we’ve seen over the last year. She took over blog strategy and worked to hone the number of blogs and strengthen existing brands. She also managed to find time for some writing while here, driving our live coverage expansion, penning a Style column for more than a year, blogging for BlogPost and Style Blog and writing magazine stories. But her biggest strength is her personality, a combination of relentless determination and self-deprecating humor that helped her motivate young developers.

Dylan Matthews is a wunderkind in his own right. A blogger since middle school, Dylan had freelanced for Slate and worked at the American Prospect — before his 18th birthday. He started contributing to Wonkblog while still a student at Harvard and jumped in full-time in 2012. Last year he launched Know More, which was an instant hit. We will miss his humor and sharp instincts for what works on the Web.

Please join us in wishing Ezra, Melissa and Dylan the best and thanking them for their many contributions to The Post.

Chris Roush

Chris Roush was the dean of the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. He was previously Walter E. Hussman Sr. Distinguished Professor in business journalism at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is a former business journalist for Bloomberg News, Businessweek, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Tampa Tribune and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. He is the author of the leading business reporting textbook "Show me the Money: Writing Business and Economics Stories for Mass Communication" and "Thinking Things Over," a biography of former Wall Street Journal editor Vermont Royster.

Recent Posts

Tankersley becomes Berlin bureau chief at NY Times

Jim Tankersley has been named Berlin bureau chief for the New York Times. He has been…

3 hours ago

Politico’s Guggenheim wins Dirksen award

Politico tax policy reporter Benjamin Guggenheim has been awarded the Everett McKinley Dirksen Award for…

3 hours ago

The Economist hires Wu to cover China

The Economist has hired Sarah Wu as a China correspondent. She previously worked at Reuters, reporting on…

3 hours ago

SF Standard tech reporter Anand departs

Priya Anand, a tech culture reporter at the San Francisco Standard, has left the publication…

3 hours ago

Reuters hires Buzbee as US and Canada news editor

Sally Buzbee will join Reuters as news editor for the United States and Canada. She…

4 hours ago

Fox Business host Duffy named transportation secretary

President-elect Donald Trump has named Fox Business show host Sean Duffy as his transportation secretary. Greg Wehner of…

17 hours ago