I’m writing a talk that I will give next weekend for supporters of the Ringling College of Art and Design. This time, I was given little direction as to what to talk about. But I know people love to hear about The New Yorker. Below are the two who founded the magazine in 1925. Harold Ross, a midwestern journalist and editor, and Jane Grant, a NY Times City Reporter, unusual for a woman in the 1920’s. They were married, and wanted to start a humor publication for the new urban elite in the city. The publication was wobbly on its feet for a few months,
You Can't Kill The New Yorker
You Can't Kill The New Yorker
You Can't Kill The New Yorker
I’m writing a talk that I will give next weekend for supporters of the Ringling College of Art and Design. This time, I was given little direction as to what to talk about. But I know people love to hear about The New Yorker. Below are the two who founded the magazine in 1925. Harold Ross, a midwestern journalist and editor, and Jane Grant, a NY Times City Reporter, unusual for a woman in the 1920’s. They were married, and wanted to start a humor publication for the new urban elite in the city. The publication was wobbly on its feet for a few months,