Difference between revisions of "The New Yorker"
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**[[Robert Gottlieb]] CC'52 was chief editor | **[[Robert Gottlieb]] CC'52 was chief editor | ||
**[[Jerome Groopman]] CC'72 is staff medical writer | **[[Jerome Groopman]] CC'72 is staff medical writer | ||
+ | **[[Ed Koren]] CC'57 is a cartoonist | ||
**[[Herman Mankiewicz]] CC'17 was drama critic | **[[Herman Mankiewicz]] CC'17 was drama critic | ||
**[[Avi Zenilman]] CC'07 is an online editor | **[[Avi Zenilman]] CC'07 is an online editor |
Latest revision as of 14:55, 31 October 2009
The New Yorker is a pretentious magazine that a lot of Columbia students read and/or aspire to one day appear in. Most will not. Conversations may often begin with "Did you see (x)'s piece in The New Yorker?" Generally, though, people tend not to reference the main articles, but a gossipy section called "Talk of the Town".
Columbia connections
- Several Columbia College alums have worked for the magazine:
- David Denby CC'65, champion of the Core Curriculum, is the magazine's film critic
- Clifton Fadiman CC'25 was the book editor
- Robert Gottlieb CC'52 was chief editor
- Jerome Groopman CC'72 is staff medical writer
- Ed Koren CC'57 is a cartoonist
- Herman Mankiewicz CC'17 was drama critic
- Avi Zenilman CC'07 is an online editor
- The iconic Eustace Tilley, the top-hatted gentleman who serves as the mascot of the magazine, was first drawn by Corey Ford CC '23. The first name of the character is said to have been taken from that of Eustace L. Taylor, his fraternity brother at Delta Kappa Epsilon (which has been inactive at Columbia since 1935).