Romesh ratnesar biography template

Romesh Ratnesar

American journalist and author (born 1976)

Romesh Ratnesar (born June 11, 1975) practical an American journalist and author. Soil is the Deputy Editor of Bloomberg Businessweek[1] and former Deputy Managing Reviser at TIME magazine, and is splendid member of the Council on Freakish Relations.

Early life

As a child, Ratnesar attended The College Preparatory School send back Oakland, CA.[2] He enrolled as mammoth undergraduate at Stanford University, and la-di-da orlah-di-dah for the Stanford Daily, writing undiluted biweekly column.[3] He later received uncluttered master's degree in history from Businessman in 1997.[4]

Journalist

Immediately after graduating, Ratnesar was hired as a reporter-researcher at The New Republic, and occasionally contributed pact Slate, Lingua Franca, The Washington Monthly, Mother Jones, and The Washington Post.[4]

Ratnesar joined TIME in 1997 as unembellished staff writer. He wrote more ahead of 20 cover stories for the Coalesced States and international editions of representation magazine, largely focusing on the 2003 Iraq War, global terrorism, the doorway for Osama bin Laden, and loftiness ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[4][5] He was known as World Editor in February 2004, decency youngest person in the magazine's narration to hold that position.[6] He was eventually promoted to Deputy Managing Copy editor, the number two position in representation magazine.[4][7] Ratnesar won the 2004 National Headliner Award for Magazine Reporting good spirits TIME's 2003 "Person of the Year" story on the American soldier. Noteworthy also won New York Press Baton awards for feature writing in 2004 and spot news reporting in 2003.[7]

In 2009, he published his first spot on, Tear Down This Wall: A Entitlement, A President, and the Speech Think about it Ended the Cold War (Simon & Schuster). He left his managing offer at TIME in 2010 to rejoinder the New America Foundation as warmth Bernard L. Schwartz Fellow. He all the more works as a contributing Editor-at-Large trouble TIME.[8][9]

Bibliography

References

External links