The Delacorte Lectures: Jacob Weisberg
Jacob Weisberg, Chairman of the
Slate Group speaks as part of the 2014 Delacorte Lectures.
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Jacob Weisberg, is Chairman of
The Slate Group, a unit of
The Washington Post Company devoted to developing a family of Internet-based publications through start-ups and acquisitions. The Slate group's roster includes Slate, The
Root, and the video site Slate V.
A native of
Chicago, Weisberg attended
Yale University and
New College, Oxford. From
1989 until
1994, he worked as a writer and editor at
The New Republic. Between 1994 and
1996, he covered politics for
New York Magazine. In 1996, he joined the new
Internet magazine Slate, where he covered the 1996 and
2000 presidential campaigns as
Chief Political Correspondent.
Weisberg served as Editor of Slate from
2002 until 2008. He has also been a contributing writer for
The New York Times Magazine, a contributing editor of
Vanity Fair, and a reporter for Newsweek in
London and
Washington.
Weisberg is the author of several books, including The
Bush Tragedy, which was a
New York Times bestseller in 2008. With former
Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin, he co-wrote
In an Uncertain World, which was published in
2003. His first book, In
Defense of
Government, was published in 1996.
His regular opinion column is published by Slate. In addition, Weisberg is a member of the
Financial Times A-List board of contributors, and a contributing editor for
Vogue. He serves as a member of the
Board of Directors of the
PEN American Center and the
Committee to Protect Journalists.
The Delacorte Lectures, presented in the spring semester, examine aspects of magazine journalism by a leader in the field of magazine publishing. The series is headed by
Victor Navasky, the
George T. Delacorte
Professor in
Magazine Journalism and director of the Delacorte
Center.