Alessandra Stanley (born October 3, 1955) is an American journalist.[1] As of 2019, she is the co-founder of a weekly newsletter "for worldly cosmopolitans" called Air Mail, alongside former Vanity Fair editor-in-chief Graydon Carter.[2]
In the fall of 2011, Stanley taught a class at Princeton University called "Investigative Viewing: The Art of Television Criticism", described as an "intensive introduction to criticism as it is undertaken at the highest level of a cultural institution".[12]
Several news and media organizations, including the Times, have criticized the accuracy of Stanley's reporting.[13][14][15][16] Among the articles that they have criticized are a September 5, 2005, piece on Hurricane Katrina,[17] a 2005 article that mistakenly called the sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond "All About Raymond",[18] and a July 18, 2009, retrospective on the career of Walter Cronkite that contained errors.[19] In an August 2009 article examining the mistakes in the Cronkite piece, Clark Hoyt, the Times's public editor, described Stanley as "much admired by editors for the intellectual heft of her coverage of television" but "with a history of errors".[20] Then executive editor Bill Keller defended Stanley, saying "She is — in my opinion, among others — a brilliant critic".[21]
Stanley, who is Euro-American, wrote an article for The New York Times in September 2014 entitled "Wrought in Rhimes's Image: Viola Davis Plays Shonda Rhimes's Latest Tough Heroine" about television series How to Get Away with Murder and the career of its African-American producer, Shonda Rhimes.[22] Stanley wrote, "When Shonda Rhimes writes her autobiography, it should be called 'How to Get Away With Being an Angry Black Woman'" and made comments about African-Americans that were seen as offensive. Stanley's piece, wrote the Times's Public Editor, Margaret Sullivan, "struck many readers as completely off-base. Many called it offensive, while some went further, saying it was racist".[23] Stanley defended her piece, writing in an email message to Talking Points Memo, "[t]he whole point of the piece—once you read past the first 140 characters—is to praise Shonda Rhimes for pushing back so successfully on a tiresome but insidious stereotype".[24] The organization Color of Change called for a retraction from the Times.[25]
As of 2017, Stanley is no longer employed by the Times.[26]
In 2023, Stanley[27] co-authored a letter from the editor for Air Mail Weekly explaining their decision to let accused rapist Armie Hammer[28] tell his side of the story in response to charges filed against him in 2022. In the letter, Stanley cites their decision was made in an attempt to "believe the men."
^Stanley, Alessandra (9 February 2017). "The End of the Engagement Announcements". Committed: 165 Years of Love (and War) in The New York Times Wedding Announcements. Retrieved 10 February 2017. Alessandra Stanley, a former New York Times reporter, foreign correspondent and critic, is a writer based in New York.