Jeff Bezos is one of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs — but making his Washington Post staffers face reality may be his toughest-ever career challenge. A long time ago in a media galaxy that now seems far,
Lauren Sánchez, Bezos’ fiancée, will lead the all-women crew for the springtime flight. Pop star Katy Perry, “CBS Mornings” host Gayle King, NASA rocket scientist Aisha Bowe, civil rights activist Amanda Nguyen and producer Kerianne Flynn will also be on board.
Last week saw a new attempt to dismantle independent journalism, and it was the most dispiriting kind. The assault came from within. Jeff Bezos, owner of
The Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos had quite an interesting dinner after announcing a shocking change to what the paper will and won’t publish.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos dined with President Trump hours after overhauling the Washington Post’s opinion section — in the tech billionaire’s latest action to cozy up to the nation’s new chief executive.
The billionaire handled his ownership admirably for more than a decade. But his courage failed him when he needed it most.
Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos defended his decision to overhaul the newspaper’s opinion page, insisting there’s nothing “fascist” about advocating for “personal liberties and free markets.” The billionaire Amazon founder faced harsh backlash over last week’s announcement that the Beltway broadsheet’s opinion pages will better reflect American values like “free markets and personal liberties” — a move that led to the resignation of
Scott Jennings laughed as fellow panelists Toure and Jeff Jarvis decried a "fascist coup" and a "dictatorship" under President Donald Trump.
The Washington Post has won an international reputation for its journalism. But recent changes are threatening its status as an icon.
The tech billionaire has acquired a new look and a new lifestyle in recent years. Now an editorial shift at the Washington Post has many wondering if he’s changed his politics too.
"The Washington Post" reportedly lost 75,000 paid subscribers after Jeff Bezos' required pieces on 'personal liberties and free markets' to run every day in the opinions pages.