Graydon Carter

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Graydon Carter
Image:Graydon carter waverly inn new york november 15 2007 photo by christopher peterson.jpg
Gendermale
BornJuly 14 1949 (1949-07-14) (age 60)
Birth placeCanada
Circumstances
OccupationMagazine editor
TitleEditor-in-chief, U.S. Vanity Fair
EthnicityImage:Flag of Canada.svg Canadian
Notable credit(s)

Edward Graydon Carter (born 14 July 1949) is a Canadian-born American journalist and author. He is editor of Vanity Fair. He also co-founded, with Kurt Andersen, the satirical monthly magazine Spy in 1986.

Carter began his career at Time as a writer-trainee where he met Andersen. After Spy closed down, Carter would become editor at the New York Observer before being invited to Vanity Fair to take over from Tina Brown, who left for The New Yorker.

Carter's Vanity Fair has been notable for combining high-profile celebrity cover stories with serious journalism. His often idiosyncratic personal style was the subject of a book by former Vanity Fair contributing editor Toby Young, How to Lose Friends and Alienate People.

Carter has identified himself as a libertarian: "I don't vote. I find both parties to be appalling and OK at the same time. I find it harder for anybody as they get older to feel 100 per cent strongly behind one party. There's lots more grey than when I was younger. I'm a libertarian."[1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Financial Times (FT.com) FT Weekend - The Front Line: Glad to be Gray. By Julia Cuthbertson, Financial Times, Jan 11, 2003.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links

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