Norman Pearlstine
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Norman Pearlstine joined the Los Angeles Times in 2018 as Executive Editor, a role he held until December 2020. He previously worked as an editor and reporter for five decades in the U.S., Asia, and Europe.
He started at The Wall Street Journal in 1968, and he worked as a staff reporter in Dallas, Detroit and Los Angeles before becoming the Journal’s Tokyo bureau chief in 1973. In 1976, he became The Asian Wall Street Journal’s first Managing Editor, based in Hong Kong.
He left the Journal in 1978 to return to Los Angeles as Executive Editor of Forbes for the West Coast and the Pacific.
Two years later he returned to the Journal where, over the next 12 years, he worked as National Editor in New York, Editor and Publisher of The Wall Street Journal/Europe in Brussels, and then he returned to New York as Managing Editor and then Executive Editor. He also launched Smart Money magazine in 1992 and 1993 for Dow Jones & Co. and Hearst Corp.
Between 1995 and 2005 Pearlstine served as Editor in Chief of Time Warner and Time Inc. In those capacities, Pearlstine oversaw the editorial content of Time Inc.’s 154 magazines, including Entertainment Weekly, Fortune, In Style, Money, People, Real Simple, Sports Illustrated and Time. He then became a Senior Advisor to the CEO of Time Warner for a year before holding the same title at The Carlyle Group where he worked with the private equity firm’s Telecom and Media team.
He joined Bloomberg L.P. in 2008 as Chief Content Officer, and he subsequently took on the additional role as Chairman of Bloomberg Businessweek in New York and Bloomberg Government in Washington, D.C. In 2013 he returned to Time Inc., first as Chief Content Officer and then as Vice Chairman, a position he held until he retired from it in 2017.
Pearlstine currently serves on the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press steering committee. He is also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Council on Foreign Relations. He formerly served as Co-Chair of the USC Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy, President of The American Academy in Berlin, and on the boards of the Carnegie Corp., the Tribeca Film Institute and the Sundance Institute.
He received his B.A. from Haverford College, his L.L.B. from the University of Pennsylvania, and he did postgraduate work at the law school of Southern Methodist University.
Pearlstine is the author of “Off the Record: The Press, the Government, and the War over Anonymous Sources,” published in 2007. He is the recipient of numerous honors, including the American Society of Magazine Editors’ Hall of Fame, the Gerald Loeb Lifetime Achievement Award for Distinguished Business & Financial Journalism, and the National Press Foundation’s Editor of the Year Award.
Latest From This Author
Dear Reader, I woke up New Year’s Day convinced that 2020 would be the most consequential year in recent memory.
April 2, 2020
Huawei ha sido ensangrentado por los esfuerzos de Estados Unidos para destruirlo, pero su fundador parece confiar en que el mayor fabricante de teléfonos inteligentes y telecomunicaciones de China seguirá siendo formidable
Dec. 20, 2019
Huawei has been bloodied by America’s efforts to destroy it, but founder Ren Zhengfei seems confident that China’s largest smartphone and telecom manufacturer will remain formidable.
Dec. 19, 2019
I was behind the wheel, Charlene beside me, in her powder-blue MG convertible, making our way from the Philadelphia suburbs, through Pottsville and up Route 61 to Ashland, a small, quiet village in the heart of Pennsylvania’s fading anthracite region.
June 16, 2019
The first six times I met Richard Holbrooke, I needed to introduce myself.
May 24, 2019
I had known about Eli Broad’s many business accomplishments, having first met and written an article for the Wall Street Journal about him in 1969.
May 22, 2019
Because of a major computer breakdown that affected our printing and deliveries, many of you did not receive your copy of Saturday’s Los Angeles Times.
Dec. 29, 2018
Memo to Murdoch: If you buy the Wall Street Journal, don’t be afraid to let it take a tough look at your own empire.
July 8, 2007
Murdoch is an old-style media mogul, which is why he wants Dow Jones’ paper.
May 4, 2007