Kevin Merida | |
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![]() Merida in 2021 | |
Born | (1957-01-17)January 17, 1957 (age 68) |
Education | Boston University (BS) University of California, Berkeley |
Occupation(s) | Executive editor,Los Angeles Times |
Spouse | |
Children | 3, includingDarrell Britt-Gibson |
Kevin Merida (born January 17, 1957[1]) is an Americanjournalist and author. He formerly served as executive editor at theLos Angeles Times, where he oversaw and coordinated all news gathering operations, including city and national desks, Sports and Features departments, Times Community News and Los Angeles Times en Español.[2]
Prior to joining the Times, Merida was a ESPN senior VP andeditor-in-chief. He supervised the creation and launch in May 2016 ofThe Undefeated (rebranded as "Andscape" in 2022).[3] A multimedia platform that explores the intersections of race, sports and culture, editor in chief Merida expanded The Undefeated brand acrossThe Walt Disney Company, with a content portfolio encompassing journalism, documentaries and television specials, albums, music videos, live events, digital talk shows and two bestselling children’s books.[2][4]
During his tenure at ESPN, Merida oversaw the investigative/news enterprise unit, the television shows “E:60” and “Outside the Lines.” He chaired ESPN’s editorial board.
Kevin Merida was born inWichita, Kansas, and raised in theWashington, D.C., area.[5] He is the eldest of two children born to the late Jesse Merida, a geologist and paleontologist employed with theUnited States Geological Survey andSmithsonian Institution.[6] His mother, Doris, (née Ewell) worked as a communications specialist andFOIA officer for theNational Science Foundation.
Merida attendedCrossland High School, among the first group of children in the U.S. to be bused under a 1971 Supreme Court ruling.[7][8] He graduated fromBoston University.[9] After graduating, he attended theUniversity of California, Berkeley's "Summer Program for Minority Journalists."[8]
Merida's journalistic and research focus generally involvesbiographies about "difficult subjects," as described by the Houston Institute for Race & Justice.[10] He has covered biographical subjects likeStrom Thurmond,Bob Dole,George W. Bush, andNewt Gingrich.[9]
Merida began his journalism career at theMilwaukee Journal.[5] He served as a general assignments reporter and rotating city desk editor from 1979 to 1983.
In 1983, Merida was recruited by theDallas Morning News, where he initially worked as a special projects reporter and local political writer. He was later promoted to Washington-based national correspondent and White House correspondent covering the George H.W. Bush presidency. He concluded his tenure at the paper as assistant managing editor in charge of foreign and national news coverage. At those newspapers, he wrote aboutcrime andsociety.[8]
He was hired byThe Washington Post in 1993.[8] During his 22-year career at the paper, Merida served as a congressional correspondent, national political reporter, longform feature writer, magazine columnist and senior editor in several roles.[5][11] He was the coordinating editor of the Post’s yearlong 2006 series, “Being a Black Man," which was featured in the newspaper. The series earned a Peabody Award for increasing “our ability to understand the old issues in new ways,” and for its “melding of old and new forms of journalism and pointing to the future of electronic communication.”[12]
In 2008, Merida became Assistant Managing Editor atThe Washington Post for the paper's United States national news department.[11] He led the national staff for four years during the Obama presidency. Merida co-authored 'Supreme Discomfort: The Divided Soul of Clarence Thomas, aboutClarence Thomas, with Michael A. Fletcher.[13] He teamed with Deborah Willis in 2008 to co-author the bestselling hardcover photo book, Obama, the Historic Campaign in Photographs.[14]
He was named managing editor, "responsible for news and features coverage as well as the Universal News Desk," on February 4, 2013.[5] During his tenure in that position, he helped lead the newspaper to four Pulitzer Prizes. He was instrumental in revamping the Post’s digital presence, transforming the paper’s website into one of the world’s top-ranked online news journals.[15]
After a six-month search, The Los Angeles Times announced on Monday, May 3, 2021 that it had selected Merida to be executive editor of the publication.[16] In January 2024, it was announced that Merida would step down from his role atThe Los Angeles Times[17], with owner Patrick Soon-Shiong later stating he fired Merida in an interview with Tucker Carlson in March 2025.
Merida serves on the boards of the Pulitzer Prizes,[18] and the Boston University Board of Trustees.[19] In addition, he sits on the boards of theKaiser Family Foundation,[20] the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education,[21] thePhilip Merrill College of Journalism[22] and the Wallace House at the University of Michigan.[23]
In 2020, Merida was named to the Dean’s Advisory Council at the Gwen Ifill School of Media, Humanities and Social Sciences, Simmons University.[24]
Merida was part of a 1990 Dallas Morning News team that was named a Pulitzer Prize finalist in explanatory journalism for a special report on the world’s “hidden wars.”[25]
Merida lives in Los Angeles with his wife, journalist, author and former Washington Post columnistDonna Britt. In 2012,The Huffington Post named the couple one of the "Black Voices Power Couples" of the year.[27] He has one son with his wife and two stepsons from her previous marriage, including actorDarrell Britt-Gibson.[citation needed]