Event class: magazine, editor, became, writer, publishing, work, left, career, worked, publisher
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de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Kurt Eichenwald | When Mr. Smith began writing his book The Power Game, Eichenwald became his research assistant, leaving in 1986 to become associate editor at The National Journal in Washington. |
Harry Furniss | He left Punch in 1894 when its owners discovered that he had sold one of his' Punch' drawings to Pears Soap for use in an advertising campaign. |
Mark Ulriksen | Ulriksen's first significant illustration assignments came in 1993 from The New Yorker, at the time under the helm of editor Tina Brown, a relationship that has continued to this day. |
Wolfgang Jeschke | At the end of 1972, Jeschke took the position of science fiction consultant and editor at Heyne Verlag -- originally together with Franke -- at first as a freelancer. |
Phill Feltham | In May 2011, Feltham became Managing Editor of Electrical Source Magazine. |
Clayton Hickman | Hickman officially joined the magazine industry in 1999, when he moved to London, England to become the Editorial Assistant on Film Review for Visual Imagination. |
Jesse Moynihan | He has contributed work to such publications as Philadelphia Weekly, The Philadelphia Independent, Arthur (magazine), Mome, Meathaus, The Believer (magazine), and Vice Jesse collaborated with graphic novelist Dash Shaw in the May 2010 issue of The Believer (magazine). |
Howardena Pindell | Pindell was initially a curatorial assistant, but in 1977 became associate curator of the department of Prints and Illustrated Books. |
John Bushemi | In June 1942 Bushemi was reassigned as a staff photographer to Yank, a weekly magazine for enlisted men, and was based in its editorial office in New York City. |
Gordon Landsborough | In 1949, Gordon Landsborough was hired by publishers Hamilton & Co as production editor for their entire range of books. |
Robert D. Ziff | His father was the Jewish American media magnate William Ziff Jr. (d. 2006), who had built the Ziff-Davis magazine empire that included titles such as Popular Aviation, PC Magazine, and Car and Driver. |
Jens Olof Lasthein | Since 1992, Lasthein has lived in Stockholm and worked as a freelance photographer for magazines and newspapers as well as on his own projects. |
Jackie Robinson | Since Robinson had sold exclusive rights to any retirement story to'' Look'' magazine two years previously, March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom | March on Washington, August 28, 1963. |
Carine Roitfeld | She was succeeded at Vogue Paris on February 1, 2011, by Emmanuelle Alt, who had served as fashion director under Roitfeld. |
Jim Baen | In 1977 he returned to Ace to head their science fiction line, working with publisher Tom Doherty. |
Shirrel Rhoades | After selling his interest to his partners in 1973, he joined Open Court Publishing in Illinois to launch Cricket, a literary magazine for children. |
William Sieghart | In 1986 he founded Forward Publishing with business partner Neil Mendoza, a leading independent contract publisher, publishing magazines, children's books and poetry books. |
John Joseph Adams | In January 2010 he left F&SF to edit Lightspeed Magazine, an online science fiction magazine which launched June 1, 2010. |
Tom Hilditch | In 1997, as UK editor-in-chief of Penthouse Magazine he oversaw an attempt to rebrand the magazine as PH. UK and reposition it as a middle-shelf'' adult magazine for grown-ups''. |
JG Faherty | In 2012, as the Horror Writers Association's Library Liaison and founder of their YA Literacy and Library programs, Faherty initiated literacy initiatives with several library organizations and established a partnership with Ray Billingsley, creator of the Curtis comic strip seen in more than 250 newspapers, to promote literacy to young adult readers. |
Carl Larsson | After several years working as an illustrator of books, magazines, and newspapers, Larsson moved to Paris in 1877, where he spent several frustrating years as a hardworking artist without any success. |
Jeff Pearlman | In 2002, Pearlman left Sports Illustrated and spent the next two years at Newsday, but left to focus on writing books. |
Roberta Beach Jacobson | In 1996 Jacobson became a full-time freelance writer working for travel publications, translating books and contributing to anthologies. |
William Gaines | Gaines converted Mad to a magazine in 1955, partly to retain the services of its talented editor Harvey Kurtzman, who had received offers from elsewhere. |
Vera Wang | They resided in Manhattan with their two adopted daughters : Beginning in 1970, Wang was a senior fashion editor for'' Vogue'' but left Vogue after being turned down for the editor-in-chief position currently filled by Anna Wintour and joined Ralph Lauren as a design director for two years. |
Richard Ford | In 1982, the magazine folded, and when Sports Illustrated did not hire Ford, he returned to fiction writing with The Sportswriter, a novel about a failed novelist turned sportswriter who undergoes an emotional crisis following the death of his son. |
E. E. Smith | In January 1936, a time period where he was already an established science fiction writer, he took a job for salary plus profit-sharing, as a food technologist (a cereal chemist) at the dawnfoods. |
Sara Moulton | For twenty years, she was the chef of the executive dining room at Gourmet until the magazine's publisher, Condé Nast Publications, announced on October 5, 2009, that the magazine was ceasing publication. |
E. V. Lucas | Lucas joined the staff of the humorous magazine Punch in 1904, and remained there for the rest of his life. |
Anant Pai | Endowed with a passion for publishing and comics, his failed attempt at creating a children's magazine (Manav, 1954) was followed by a career as a junior executive in The Times of India books division, putting him in the thick of affairs when Indrajal Comics, which was famous for publishing comic book series like Mandrake and The Phantom, was launched by the Times Group. |
James Hervey Johnson | After contributing to the periodical for decades, Johnson helped Smith relocate from New York in 1964, then took over the ailing magazine after Smith's October 26, 1964 death, systematically driving its circulation further down through sloppy editing and shabby publication practices, mainly using it to promote and sell a warehouse of books printed in past decades. |
Orrin Keepnews | While working as an editor for the book publishers Simon and Schuster, Keepnews moonlighted as editor of The Record Changer magazine after fellow Columbia graduate Bill Grauer became its owner in 1948. |
Dennis Kamakahi | In 1978 he became a member of the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers and created Naukilo Publishing Company, a music publishing firm. |
Daniel Silva (novelist) | When published, the novel became a New York Times best-seller, and in 1997 Silva left CNN to pursue writing full-time. |
Jim Thurman | He also worked as a photographer with work displayed at the 1964 World's Fair and he contributed cartoons to Hugh Hefner for Playboy and The New Yorker. |
Mort Leav | Upon returning to civilian life, he drew, per one source, In 1946, Leav became art director for publisher Ruth'' Ray'' Hermann's Orbit Publications. |
Anthony Dias Blue | In 1978, Blue became West Coast Editor of Food & Wine magazine. |
Yasser Akkaoui | As a publisher, Akkaoui has been representing the interests of Executive Magazine since 2001, a media platform he uses to advocate reforms in the Middle East. |
Neil Ardley | Ardley joined the editorial staff of the World Book Encyclopedia in 1962, when the London branch of the American publisher was producing an international edition. |
Patricia Nell Warren | In 1959 she went to work for The Reader's Digest and worked there for 21 years, becoming a book editor for both the magazine and the Condensed Book Club. |
John Hersey | After his time at Cambridge, Hersey got a summer job as private secretary and driver for author Sinclair Lewis during 1937, but he chafed at his duties, and that autumn he began work for Time, for which he was hired after writing an essay on the magazine's dismal quality. |
Bethany McLean | McLean joined Vanity Fair as a contributing editor in 2008. |
Paul Zollo | In September 2004 Zollo was named Senior Editor of American Songwriter magazine headquartered in Nashville, though Zollo lives and works in Los Angeles. |
Abe Walsh | Walsh was hired in 1999 by the National Rifle Association Publication division as Group Publisher, overseeing the production of their five member-only monthly titles : American Rifleman, American Hunter, America's First Freedom, Shooting Sports USA, and NRA InSights. |
Bob Gill (artist) | In 1967, Gill left the partnership and assumed independent freelancing again, including teaching, filmmaking and writing children's books. |
Patrick Demarchelier | His work drew the attention of Elle, Marie Claire and 20 Ans Magazine He later worked for Vogue and Harper's Bazaar, first in September 1992 which resulted in a 12-year collaboration. |
George Holt Thomas | Son and grandson of successful artists he initially followed his father into The Graphic and Daily Graphic newspaper business in 1890, later making his own name and fortune by founding The Bystander and Empire Illustrated magazines. |
Marion Hume | Hume and her husband Peter Hunt relocated back to London permanently in 2005 when work on Time magazine's Style & Design special supplements, published six times a year with the U. S., Europe and Asian editions of the magazine, became too challenging from a Sydney base. |
David J. Eicher | In 1992 Editor Richard Berry left Astronomy magazine and his quarterly Telescope Making, which had been published alongside Deep Sky, ceased publication. |
Mary Ann O'Brian Malkin | Malkin purchased this weekly magazine from Bowker in 1953, by which time it had become a prime source for timely news, book reviews, and coverage of trade and library conventions. |
Chez Pazienza | He is the founder and managing editor of Deus Ex Malcontent, a blog which rose to prominence after Pazienza was fired from his job as a senior producer at CNN in 2008, as well as the CEO of DXM Media. |
Moira Forbes | She first joined Forbes Media in 2001 in its London office, overseeing marketing initiatives for the magazine's European edition. |
David J. Eicher | In the fall of 1982 Eicher left his schooling after three years of college when Richard Berry, then editor of Astronomy, offered him a position as assistant editor and a continuance of Eicher's magazine, now retitled Deep Sky and to be published quarterly. |
Eric A. Hegg | In 1899, after a year in Yukon, Hegg returned to Skagway leaving his studio in Dawson to his business companion Larss and another famous Klondike photographer, DuClos. |
David Lat | In July 2008, he became the managing editor of Breaking Media, overseeing its stable of blogs out of its New York office. |
Howard Rheingold | Shortly thereafter, he was hired on as founding executive editor of HotWired, one of the first commercial content web sites published in 1994 by Wired magazine. |
Joe Simon | Simon, who went on to work in advertising and commercial art, also founded the satirical magazine Sick in 1960, remaining with it for a decade. |
Clifford Harper | Harper remains a'' 100 % committed'' and engaged anarchist activist, having been involved with the organisation of the UK's annual Anarchist Bookfair, re-designing Freedom newspaper in 2005, producing books, pamphlets, posters, book covers, postcards and drawings for, and supporting, anarchists everywhere. |
Walter M. Baumhofer | Joining the American Artists agency in 1937, he sold to slick magazines, including The American Weekly, Collier's, Cosmopolitan, Esquire, McCalls, Redbook and Woman's Day. |
Helen Gurley Brown | In 1965, she became editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan and reversed the trend of'' high quality'' and'' cultured'' content that had come to be expected from the magazine. |
Kathryn Abbe | She left Vogue and became a freelance photographer in 1944. |
Jaime Levy | By 1995, she took a creative director position at Icon CMT, where she could focus on the creation of the online magazine'' WORD''. |
Kaye Dacus | In 2006, she left the newspaper to work for Ideals Publications, a book publishing company, as an editor. |
Bruce Mau | Mau remained the design director of Zone Books until 2004, to which he has added duties as co-editor of Swerve Editions, a Zone imprint. |
Elbridge Streeter Brooks | Brooks took a job as a clerk with the publishing house of D. Appleton & Company in 1865, and continued working professionally for various publishers and magazines for the remainder of his life. |
Ralph Steiner | Then he plunged back into the world of freelance and fashion photography, working for Vogue, Look Magazine and others before retiring in 1962. |
Linda Wolfe | In 1971 Wolfe was asked by Clay Felker to write about food for New York Magazine and was soon named a contributing editor, a position she maintained for the next 25 years. |
Hal Riney | After serving two years in the United States Army doing public relations in Italy, he joined BBDO San Francisco, moving from the mail room to head art director and finally creative director in 1968. |
Eric Bradbury | When the studio folded in 1949, Bradbury and Clarke took samples to Amalgamated Press, and were offered work at Knock-Out, edited by Leonard Matthews - Clarke writing, Bradbury drawing. |
Hellin Kay | In July 2009, she became the editor-in-chief and creative director of Los Angeles-based fashion and entertainment magazine Signature and resigned from the post eight months later. |
Thomas E. Drumm | Drumm retired from government service in July 1973 and went to work for Macmillan, Inc., a New York City publishing company specializing in non-fiction and educational works. |
Christopher Sclater Millard | In 1911 he became private secretary to Robbie Ross and editorial assistant at the Burlington Magazine edited by More Adey and Roger Fry. |
Thomas G. Osenton | Beginning in 1989, he was president and chief operating officer of Sporting News Publishing Company, where we was also publisher of The Sporting News weekly as well as Sporting Goods Dealer monthly - the industry's trade journal. |
Nancy Lee Andrews | In 1996 she was appointed director of photography for Twang, a Vanity Fair take on country music. |
Mansoor Alam | Alam founded Fort Box Publishing in 2011, a not-for-profit publishing company that offered free services for authors engaged in humanitarian and activist work. |
H. H. Lewis | Found in The Anvil, 1933 He eventually returned to the family farm to pursue a career of freelance writing, including publishing his own magazine, The Outlander. |
Roger Hargreaves | He grew up in High Lees at 703 Halifax Road, His original ambition was to be a cartoonist, and in 1971, while working as the creative director at a London firm, he wrote the first Mr. Men book, Mr. Tickle. |
Jorge Arauz | In 2004, while interning at Miami Beach-based Perfect Vision Media Group, Arauz was offered a position as Group Assistant Editor for the publishing house's 3 flagship titles, LRM, Las Olas and International Yachtsman. |
Mark Laurie (photographer) | Laurie was the headline speaker at the Canadian National Photographers convention in August 1992, was past president to several photography organizations including Professional Photographers of Canada and Calgary Photographic Society, and the founding editor of two photography magazines, Portfolio Magazine and InFocus, and the PPOC Loan Collection Book Series. |
Barney Hoskyns | In 2000, Hoskyns became Senior Editor of CDNOW in London, leaving to co-found Rock's Backpages, an online library of classic rock journalism. |
Matthew Fraser (journalist) | Fraser made an attempt to return to the show two months later, but quit suddenly again when, in May 2003, he was appointed Editor-in-Chief of the National Post, replacing founding editor Ken Whyte. |
Chris Burkard | In 2008, at age 21 Burkard earned a position as the senior staff photographer at Surfline, a global, surf forecasting and content site, based in California. |
Lawrence Ross | Ross worked as a reporter, for the Los Angeles Independent Newspaper and was appointed managing editor of Rap Sheet magazine, hip hop's first West Coast magazine in 1997. |
Laura B. Whitmore | In addition to handling marketing, PR and artist relations for the Korg, Marshall, and VOX brands, Whitmore was appointed editor of Korg's ProView Magazine and of the VOX Catalog, for which she won a Davey Award in 2006. |
Henrik Frystyk Nielsen | In 2000, Nielsen joined as an editor the standardizing effort of SOAP within the W3C XML Protocol Working Group which eventually became SOAP 1. |
Richard Meredith (author) | A former national newspaper journalist and business magazine publisher, Meredith turned to adventure travel writing after selling his Holcot Press business in 2000. |
Peter Calvocoressi | In 1973 he was enticed back to publishing by the offer of the newly created post of Editor-in-Chief of Penguin Books. |
Anthony Dias Blue | In 1980, Blue became Wine and Spirits Editor of Bon Appétit Magazine, a position he held for 26 years. |
Emily Kimbrough | In 1926, she was recruited by Barton Curry with Ladies' Home Journal, and left Marshall Field's to become Ladies' Home Journal's fashion editor. |
Emeka Esogbue | Emeka would join Trade Africa, publishers of Africa Global Business magazine, Lagos-based media outfit in 2009 as a member of the Editorial Executive. |
Ebba von Sydow | 2005 she became editor in chief of the long running Swedish fashion and lifestyle magazine VeckoRevyn. |
Paula Scher | In 1991, after the studio suffered from the recession and Koppel took the position of Creative Director at Esquire magazine, Scher began consulting and joined Pentagram as a partner in the New York office. |
Parke Godwin (journalist) | Godwin became an associate editor of Putnam's Magazine with George William Curtis under managing editor Charles Frederick Briggs ; the three also collaborated on a gift book called The Homes of American Authors (1852). |
Lela Cole Kitson | In 1926 The Clayton Magazines Inc. added Lela to their stable of writers. |
Marie Mattingly Meloney | In 1926 the magazine merged with another Butterick Publishing Company publication, The Designer, with Meloney continuing at the helm. |
Ciaran McKeown | However, the Ford Foundation made a grant to the group, which included a salary for McKeown, enabling him to become full-time editor of Peace by Peace, the group's newspaper, also completing a year as editor of Fortnight Magazine, in 1977. |
Mark Matousek | He was hired by Andy Warhol's Interview in 1982, first as a proofreader then as the magazine's first senior editor. |
Earl Oliver | After being laid off from IKON Office Solutions' Print on Demand Division in 2005, Oliver left the corporate world to become a full-time musician and writer. |
Bob Gill (artist) | In 1960 after an interview in a New York hotel room for a job in London, he moved to the UK to work for Charles Hobson, at a'' hack advertising agency'', according to Gill, which was later sold to Grey Advertising (now Grey Global Group). |
Jorge Arauz | In 2005, he was promoted to Managing Editor, launching design titles Modernista and Florida Classic Home as well as bridal title Perfect Bride and Spanish-language quarterly, International Yachtsman Español. |