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Marc Ambinder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American university professor, journalist, and television producer (born 1978)

Marc Ambinder (/ˈæmbɪndər/ ; bornc. 1978) is an American university professor, journalist, andtelevision producer.[1][2] He is a former politics editor atThe Atlantic, aWhite House Correspondent forNational Journal, contributing editor forGQ, and was editor-at-large ofThe Week[2] and a member of theUSA Today national board of contributors.[3] In 2017, he was the journalist-in-residence at theUniversity of Pennsylvania School of Law.[4] His third book,The Brink: President Reagan and the Nuclear War Scare of 1983, was published by Simon & Schuster in July 2018. He teaches at theUSC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, where he leads Annenberg's digital security initiative.[5]

Education

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Ambinder received a A.B. in history fromHarvard University in 2001. He was an associate managing editor ofThe Harvard Crimson.[6]

Career

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In 2016, Ambinder was a Leadership Fellow[7] at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Communications and Journalism. Since 2017, he has taught investigative journalism, political journalism and national security journalism. He consults for Fortune 100 companies on corporate and strategic communication. Until December 31, 2011 Ambinder was theWhite House correspondent at theNational Journal. He previously worked atABC News and was chief political consultant toCBS News from 2008 to 2011. For years, he was the author of apolitical blog,The Hotline.

Though presidential politics and Washington have been his primary areas of interest, he also writes about intelligence and national security, and hasbroken several stories, including details about theraid on Osama bin Laden. His first book, "The Command: Inside The President's Secret Army," is an examination of the secretiveJoint Special Operations Command.

He has secured access to the protective details of the Secret Service, broken stories about computer failures that jeopardized America’s nuclear arsenal, probed Pakistan’s fragile intelligence services, and became an authority on national security topics ranging from theNSA and surveillance, to the government’s secret commando force, to its secretive continuity of government plans.[8][9]

He has written forThe New York Times,The New Yorker,The Washington Post,Vice, and numerous national magazines.[10] He has been a consulting producer and on-air expert for documentaries about special operations forces, the Secret Service and government doomsday plans. He has been a guest on every national television news network in the U.S., on theBBC, onAl Jazeera International and was a regular analyst on politics forCBS News Radio.

His online journalism has won him several awards and attracted a largeTwitter following. He was nominated for an Emmy in 2005 and was part of a team that won a DuPont Silver Baton from Columbia University.[11]

Gawker reported that, in 2009, Ambinder struck a deal withHillary Clinton spokesmanPhilippe Reines to provide positive remarks on Clinton in exchange for receiving an advance copy of a Clinton speech.[12][13] Gawker based its report on a fragment of an email chain they obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. Both Ambinder and Reines said that the emails lacked critical context, which showed that Ambinder did not actually make any such deal with Reines. Ambinder later said he regretted how such incidents, even when misinterpreted, contributed to the fraying of trust between political journalists and the public, and decried the proliferation of transactional reporting in Washington.[14][15]

Personal

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In 2010 Ambinder wrote about his experience withbariatric surgery, which reduced his weight from 235 to 150 pounds.[16] He is married to Michael Park, a corporate strategy consultant.[17]

References

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  1. ^"Cancelled: A conversation with James Adomian".annenberg.usc.edu. RetrievedOctober 24, 2019.
  2. ^abNorman, Arlissa (April 22, 2019).""The Week" editor Marc Ambinder talks the Mueller Report".Arc Publishing. RetrievedOctober 24, 2019.
  3. ^"Journalists need new rules after Trump: Marc Ambinder".USA TODAY. Retrieved2019-10-24.
  4. ^"Participants".www.law.upenn.edu. Retrieved2019-10-24.
  5. ^Shelton, Martin (2019-09-11)."Why aren't more journalism schools teaching digital security?".Medium. Retrieved2019-10-24.
  6. ^"Crimson Alum Replaces Kristol | News | The Harvard Crimson".www.thecrimson.com. Retrieved2019-10-24.
  7. ^"Marc Ambinder".Reinvent. 11 August 2016. RetrievedOctober 24, 2019.
  8. ^Ambinder, Marc (February 9, 2011)."Inside the Secret Service".The Atlantic. RetrievedMarch 17, 2015.
  9. ^Ambinder, Marc (July 18, 2014)."Why the Washington Post's big NSA revelation is a bust".The Week. RetrievedMarch 17, 2015.
  10. ^Ambinder, Marc (November 14, 2014)."Why Hasn't Obama Closed Guantanamo?".Vice. RetrievedMarch 17, 2015.
  11. ^"Nominees for news and documentary Emmy Awards". emmyawards.org. July 18, 2006. Archived fromthe original on September 24, 2015. RetrievedMarch 17, 2015.
  12. ^Trotter, J.K."This Is How Hillary Clinton Gets the Coverage She Wants".gawker.com. Archived fromthe original on 10 February 2016. Retrieved18 February 2017.
  13. ^Ambinder, Marc (15 July 2009)."Hillary Clinton's 'Smart Power' Breaks Through".theatlantic.com. Retrieved18 February 2017.
  14. ^Wemple, Erik (February 12, 2016)."Philippe Reines rips Beltway media, Erik Wemple Blog for 'hypocrisy'".The Washington Post. Retrieved7 February 2017.
  15. ^Trotter, J. K. (9 February 2016)."This Is How Hillary Clinton Gets the Coverage She Wants".Gawker. Retrieved2022-03-19.
  16. ^Rovzar, Chris (April 13, 2010)."Tim Russert's Death May Have Saved Marc Ambinder's Life".Daily Intel. NYMag.com. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2010.
  17. ^The Week (October 16, 2017)."Marc Ambinder TheWeek.com's editor-at-large". The Week. RetrievedOctober 16, 2017.

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