Marc Tracy | |
---|---|
Education | Columbia University (BA) |
Occupation | Journalist |
Organization | The New York Times |
Spouse | Amanda Hess |
Awards |
National Jewish Book Award (2012) National Magazine Award for Blogging (2011) |
Marc Aaron Tracy [1] is an American journalist. He is a reporter on the Culture desk at The New York Times. [2] Tracy was a staff writer at The New Republic and at Tablet, where he won a National Magazine Award for Blogging. [3] He also won a National Jewish Book Award in 2012 for co-editing the anthology Jewish Jocks: An Unorthodox Hall of Fame. [4]
Tracy received his BA from Columbia University in 2007. [5] He was a senior editor for The Blue and White and a writer for the Columbia Political Review. [6] Tracy started his journalism career at Tablet magazine, where he ran the blog that won the last National Magazine Award given for blogging. [3] While editing Tablet's blog, Tracy approached Franklin Foer about writing a sports-themed book, which eventually led to the idea for the anthology Jewish Jocks. [7] The book won a 2012 National Jewish Book Award. [8] The New Republic hired Tracy as a staff writer in 2012, writing about the media, politics and New York City intelligentsia. [9] [10]
In 2014, Tracy joined the staff of The New York Times, covering college athletics for the paper's Sports desk. [11] He joined the Business desk in 2019, covering topics in the media industry including the decline of local print media and The New York Times Company. [12] In 2022, Tracy joined the paper's Culture desk to cover debates about representation and politics in the arts. [13]
Tracy is married to Amanda Hess, who is also a journalist and critic at The New York Times. [1] [14]
Marc Tracy | |
---|---|
Education | Columbia University (BA) |
Occupation | Journalist |
Organization | The New York Times |
Spouse | Amanda Hess |
Awards |
National Jewish Book Award (2012) National Magazine Award for Blogging (2011) |
Marc Aaron Tracy [1] is an American journalist. He is a reporter on the Culture desk at The New York Times. [2] Tracy was a staff writer at The New Republic and at Tablet, where he won a National Magazine Award for Blogging. [3] He also won a National Jewish Book Award in 2012 for co-editing the anthology Jewish Jocks: An Unorthodox Hall of Fame. [4]
Tracy received his BA from Columbia University in 2007. [5] He was a senior editor for The Blue and White and a writer for the Columbia Political Review. [6] Tracy started his journalism career at Tablet magazine, where he ran the blog that won the last National Magazine Award given for blogging. [3] While editing Tablet's blog, Tracy approached Franklin Foer about writing a sports-themed book, which eventually led to the idea for the anthology Jewish Jocks. [7] The book won a 2012 National Jewish Book Award. [8] The New Republic hired Tracy as a staff writer in 2012, writing about the media, politics and New York City intelligentsia. [9] [10]
In 2014, Tracy joined the staff of The New York Times, covering college athletics for the paper's Sports desk. [11] He joined the Business desk in 2019, covering topics in the media industry including the decline of local print media and The New York Times Company. [12] In 2022, Tracy joined the paper's Culture desk to cover debates about representation and politics in the arts. [13]
Tracy is married to Amanda Hess, who is also a journalist and critic at The New York Times. [1] [14]