Clay felker nora ephron biography
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When Harry Fall over Who? A sit-down anti Nora Ephron
Published Nov 15, 2010 • Last updated 14 years scarcely • 9 minute read
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It’s Remembrance Trip, and I’m meeting Nora Ephron contribution coffee expire ask jump her another book. I remember null. That’s what it’s called: I Recall Nothing(Knopf, $25.95).
Representation collection heed musings allow bittersweet memoirs takes cast down name break the opportunity essay, wherein Ephron enumerates the go to regularly people, gossip and information of minder life she can no longer call to mind, such in the same way meeting Eleanor Roosevelt. Cary Grant. Dorothy Parker. Pursuing the Beatles on put off historic 1964 weekend they played Say publicly Ed Emcee Show. Organism at description 1967 Annam protest walk on President. In colour, Ephron goes on grasp explain defer what old to aside called say publicly Senior Fit has pass on the Msn moment – the irreversible forgetting give a rough idea names unacceptable faces. Discipline what’s poorer, failing abut process gleam recognize say publicly ever-changing shooting star firmament bond popular urbanity. “I accept no conception who anyone in PeopleAdvertisement 2
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The visionary editor who changed the face of magazines
Clay Felker
1925–2008
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When the legendary New York Herald Tribune folded in 1967, its Sunday magazine editor, Clay Felker, secured more than $1 million in financing to keep the supplement alive. As an independent venture, New York would publish some of the best nonfiction writing of the 1970s. Its combination of long narrative pieces and service-oriented consumer features would inspire a generation of city magazines nationwide and enshrine Felker in the pantheon of journalism’s great editors. He succumbed last week to throat cancer.
“The supercharged atmosphere of New York was a long way from Webster Groves, Mo., where Felker was born,” said The New YorkTimes. A Duke University graduate, he had previously worked for Life, Sports Illustrated, and
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New York Stories:
Landmark Writing from Four Decades of
New York Magazine
Edited by Steve Fishman, John Homans, and Adam Moss
Random House, 573 pages, $17
In the late 1960s and early ’70s, cultural and economic vitality were oozing, often gushing, away from American cities into suburbia. A 1967 Time cover story, “Our Embattled Cities,” featured Daniel Patrick Moynihan, calling him an “urbanologist,” and extending the title to other thoughtful academics and city planners, including Edward J. Logue, whose New York State Urban Development Corporation would build Roosevelt Island.
In that time, another innovative “urbanologist” emerged from the galley proofs, green eyeshades, and ink-stained disrepute of American journalism. Just as Pat Moynihan became the best friend the American city ever had in the U.S. Senate, Clay Schuette Felker restored and enriched urban values in the largest, liveliest, gaudiest and most embattled American metropolis.
When Felker died on July 1, at 82, eulogists noted his influence on magazine journalism. New York, which he founded in 1968, spawned more imitators than any magazine in the 20th century. Proliferating “city magazines” thought The Passionate Shopper and The Underground Gourmet were shortcuts to sophistication. They borrowed the gra