Categories: OLD Media Moves

Rutenberg named NY Times media columnist

New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet and business editor Dean Murphy sent out the following announcement on Tuesday:

Our next media columnist: Jim Rutenberg of The New York Times Magazine

He was among the first reporters to recognize the ascendance of Fox News, and helped coin the term “the Fox effect” to describe cable’s tilt to the right. He helped lead the coverage of Dan Rather’s role in a report questioning President Bush’s National Guard service that ended the CBS anchor’s career. And early last year, well before Megyn Kelly had become a lightning rod in the Republican debates, he wrote a magazine profile of the Fox News anchor that captured her contentious and winning formula.

Jim Rutenberg – chief political correspondent for the magazine, investigative reporter, White House correspondent, City Hall bureau chief and erstwhile gossip writer for the Daily News and New York Post – is returning to his media roots.

We are pleased to announce that Jim will be joining BizDay as our media columnist.

Jim takes over the media column almost a year after the passing of David Carr. Our hunt for David’s successor has been exhaustive, and we were privileged to have had extraordinary candidates from both inside and outside The Times. Jim brings to the job a passion for the story, a track record in covering the industry and the experienced eye of an astute observer.

In 2000, The Times hired Jim as a business reporter covering the media industry. He joined us from Peter Kaplan’s media-obsessed The New York Observer, where he wrote about television.

Jim cut his teeth in media reporting before Facebook, Netflix, YouTube and the iPhone revolutionized the industry. Back in those days, much of the beat was focused on covering the then-mighty traditional broadcast networks – and Jim crushed it.

He made a splash in 2003 with an exclusive about a CBS mini-series that was to present an unflattering view of Ronald and Nancy Reagan. The piece prompted such an angry response from conservatives that CBS dropped the project and sent it to Showtime – a move that left the network open to criticism that it caved to political pressure. That same year, he also gave CBS executives heartburn by breaking a story about attempts by CBS News to secure an exclusive interview with Pfc. Jessica Lynch by floating possible movie and book deals with its corporate siblings at CBS Entertainment and Simon & Schuster.

He delivered a steady stream of scoops that had network and cable news executives scrambling. There was the juicy story about Peter Jennings being asked to take a pay cut. And the one in which he got Jennings and his two rivals, Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather, to throw shade at one another as they prepared to compete while covering the party nominating conventions.

In 2004, Jim began his foray into national politics by focusing on the media aspects of the presidential campaign. Among his stories that made waves was his report that Disney was refusing to distribute Michael Moore’s anti-President Bush film, “Fahrenheit 9/11,” allegedly out of fear that Jeb Bush would retaliate against the company by revoking its tax breaks in Florida.

Most recently, Jim spent much of the past year on the magazine’s “Disenfranchised” series, which chronicled the campaign that led to the Supreme Court’s nullification of the Voting Rights Act’s most powerful provision and the consequences for minority voters. His first story, “A Dream Undone,” received a tremendous response, including a letter to the editor from President Obama.

“That sound you hear is the keening and wailing on the sixth floor,” says Jake Silverstein. “Jim came to the magazine just a couple years ago, but in that short time he’s established himself as one of the sharpest longform political writers in the country. We’ll miss Jim, even as we watch with excitement and pride as he takes over this critically important franchise.”

Jim will take up his new position on the 2nd floor in the coming weeks. Even with the keening and wailing, he will also continue contributing to the magazine as well.

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.

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