Joe Hagan
Meet the Young Heirs to The Times
In this week's New York, Joe Hagan writes a portrait of the 27 members of the fifth-generation of Sulzberger-Ochs family, the part of the family who will someday run The New York Times.
The stakes are high, and these kids started the family business from an early age. Mr. Hagan writes:
Sulzberger has said that his clan starts going to family meetings when they’re 10 years old and by 15 they understand their roles as caretakers of the New York Times. There’s also a one-day orientation session for kids turning 18 or 21—or people marrying into the family—to learn about the legacy of the Ochs-Sulzbergers.
New York's Sulzberger Profile Will Be Published on Monday
New York just sent out its weekly release previewing stories. Next week's issue will feature "Bleeding 'Times' Blood." Sub-hed: "Has the prestige (and profitability) of owning The New York Times finally sunk below the level required to keep the interest of the Sulzberger clan?"
The story is written by Joe Hagan. read more »
Portfolio, New York Preparing Write-Around Profiles on Arthur Sulzberger Jr.
Two magazines are preparing profiles of The New York Times' Arthur Sulzberger, Jr.
New York magazine has assigned Joe Hagan to write a profile, and David Margolick is preparing a piece for Portfolio. Both articles are write-arounds, and neither author has scored an on-the-record interview with Mr. Sulzberger, according to a source familiar with the situation, who also says that Mr. Sulzberger has no plans to talk to either of the writers.
Mr. Margolick's story was scheduled to run in the October issue of Portfolio hitting newsstands on Sept. 23, but it was dropped at the last minute, sources said. The story may need to be recast. read more »
Thicker Mastheads: Vanity Fair Adds Vanessa Grigoriadis and Joe Hagan
Vanity Fair has added New York contributors Vanessa Grigoriadis and (Observer-alumnus) Joe Hagan as contributing editors to its fantastically sizeable masthead, WWD's Irin Carmon reports this morning.
She also writes that it is expected that they will continue as New York contributing editors as well.
Rather Interesting
Because here at Media Mob we never miss a trick on the Rather beat...here are a couple of the best revelations from former Observer reporter Joe Hagan's New York magazine piece about the Category-5 newsman's $70 million lawsuit against his former bosses at CBS, and what he hopes to get out of it:
Most notably, Mr. Hagan reports that within months of leaving CBS, Mr. Rather hired a team of three investigators to try to shed light on the ultimate mystery surrounding CBS's September 2004 flawed story on President Bush's National Guard service--that is, the origin of the documents at the heart of the controversy. read more »
Sciame, Rampe to Try Luck at Ground Zero
The way the press release describes that task suggests how accurate Joe Hagan's description of thin men in black jackets and square glasses arguing with one another really is:
Sciame will convene the Memorial and Master Plan Design Committee of Michael Arad, Peter Walker, Max Bond and Daniel Libeskind and work in coordination with the LMDC, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and the WTC Memorial Foundation to ensure the memorial is brought in line with the $500 million budget. The Governor and Mayor have set the end of June as the deadline for resolution.
Enjoy your stay, fellas!
-Matthew SchuermanGore-TV
That's what we gather from this email to the Brownstoner, a Brooklyn real estate blog: read more »
"I am producing a piece for Al Gore's new cable channel Current TV on the present real estate boom and the consequences for folks 18- 34. I'm looking to profile a young couple looking to buy their first home in Brooklyn...."CBS's Unreal Investigation
Hagan has come across some taped conversations with the detective CBS hired, supposedly to determine the truth of the mysterious documents and of the whole story.
He reports that the detective, Eric Rigler, "went on to say that interviews with former National Guardsmen were leading him to believe the truth of the documents, if not their authenticity."
But for a variety of reasons, CBS apparently wasn't that interested in where Rigler was headed. read more »
"This is not a real investigation," Rigler said on one tape.















