American journalist and editor
Megan Greenwell is an American editor and journalist. She was the first female editor-in-chief of Deadspin and editor of Wired.com .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] She has written for publications such as ESPN The Magazine , GQ , Esquire , and New York Magazine .
Biography
Greenwell grew up in Berkeley, California . Her mother is an Episcopal priest who currently serves as the Dean of Christ Church Cathedral in Cincinnati .[ 4] [ 5]
She attended Berkeley High School , where she was a reporter for the school newspaper, Berkeley High Jacket , and uncovered an indentured servitude and sex ring operated by Berkeley's largest landlord, Lakireddy Bali Reddy ,[ 6] [ 7] before receiving her B.A. from Barnard College in 2006.[ 8] [ 5] [ 9] At Barnard, she was a fencer for the Columbia Lions fencing team and was the editor-in-chief of Columbia Daily Spectator .[ 8] [ 10]
Greenwell began as an intern, and soon covered the Iraq war from Baghdad for The Washington Post shortly after college. [ 11] She later covered education and philanthropy and was part of The Washington Post team that won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for breaking the Virginia Tech shooting .[ 12] Greenwell was later the managing editor of GOOD Magazine , the inaugural features editor at New York magazine's lifestyle website The Cut and senior editor of ESPN The Magazine .[ 13] [ 14]
Greenwell was the executive features editor for Esquire.com and was hired as the fifth and first female editor-in-chief of Deadspin in 2018.[ 15] [ 16] She later became the editor-in-chief of Wired.com in 2019.[ 17] She left her post in 2021, citing "burnout."[ 18]
Personal life
Greenwell is married to David Heller, an assistant professor of internal medicine and global health at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai .[ 5]
References
^ "Megan Greenwell" . Wired . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ "Megan Greenwell | Princeton Summer Journalism Program" . psjp.princeton.edu . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Robertson, Katie; Tracy, Marc (2021-01-28). "Washington Post, Reuters and Los Angeles Times Search for New Top Editors" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ mmacdonald (2013-10-17). "Gail Greenwell named dean of Christ Church Cathedral in Cincinnati" . Episcopal News Service . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ a b c "Megan Greenwell, David Heller" . The New York Times . 2016-10-16. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Yi, Matthew (2000-01-21). "Young Berkeley journalists broke landlord story early" . SFGATE . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Dinkelspiel, Frances (2009-12-08). "10 years later: How 2 Berkeley High reporters broke sex-ring scandal" . Berkeleyside . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ a b "Megan Greenwell - Fencing" . Columbia University Athletics . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ "George Starke '71 Helps D.C. Youths Excel | Columbia College Today" . www.college.columbia.edu . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Voice, Village (2005-04-19). "Columbia: The Awakening" . The Village Voice . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Sales, Rachel (2014-04-16). "Megan Greenwell: In Conversation With Correspondent Megan Greenwell" . Pink Pangea: The Community Of Women Who Love To Travel . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Bucholtz, Andrew (2018-02-06). "Megan Greenwell named new Deadspin editor-in-chief" . Awful Announcing . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Strauss, Ben (July 17, 2022). "Top editor Megan Greenwell leaving Deadspin" . The Washington Post .
^ Browning, Kirsten. "The Cut hires first features editor" . muckrack.com . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Barr, Jeremy (2018-02-06). "Megan Greenwell Hired as Top Editor of Deadspin (Exclusive)" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Deadspin Staff (2019-08-23). "Megan Greenwell, Like The Oakland A's Every Year, Makes An Early Exit" . Deadspin . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ "Wired.com editor Greenwell is departing" . Talking Biz News . 2021-04-15. Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
^ Kelly, Keith (April 15, 2021). "Two top Wired.com staffers resign, citing 'burnout' and 'exhaustion' " . New York Post . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .