James Ridgeway

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James Ridgeway (b. 1936) is a prominent American investigative journalist. He served as Washington correspondent for The Village Voice where he worked from the mid-1970s until April 2006. Following his departure from the Voice, Ridgeway was hired by Mother Jones magazine to run its Washington DC bureau. On April 13, 2006's Democracy Now broadcast, "Village Voice Shakeup: Top Investigative Journalist Fired, Prize Winning Writers Resign Following Merger with New Times Media," Ridgeway told Host Amy Goodman, "Mr. Lacey...killed my column, and he asked me to submit ideas for articles to him one by one, which I did, and which he either ignored or turned down, except in one case...they won't say that I'm fired. I'm supposedly laid off." [1]

Contents

[edit] Career history

Ridgeway began his career as a contributor to The New Republic, Ramparts, and the Wall Street Journal. Later, he was co-founder and editor of the political newsletters Hard Times and The Elements.

Ridgeway became nationally known when he revealed in The New Republic that General Motors' had hired private detectives to tail consumer advocate Ralph Nader in an attempt to dig up information that might discredit him (Nader was behind litigation which challenged the safety of the Corvair). Ridgeway's revelations of the company's snooping and dirty tricks prompted a Senate subcommittee led by Senator Ribicoff to summon James Roche, president of GM, to explain his company's harassment — and apologize. The incident catapulted auto safety into the public spotlight and helped send Nader's book, Unsafe at Any Speed (1965) to the top of the bestseller lists. [2]

[edit] Books, films and periodical credits

Ridgeway is the author and or editor of twenty books, including The Closed Corporation: American Universities in Crisis, The Politics of Ecology, and, more recently, The 5 Unanswered Questions About 9/11: What the 9/11 Commission Report Failed to Tell Us, The Haiti Files: Decoding the Crisis, Yugoslavia's Ethnic Nightmare (a collection co-edited with Jasminka Udovicki), A Pocket Guide to Environmental Bad Guys (with Jeffrey St. Clair), and Blood in the Face: The Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, Nazi Skinheads, the Rise of a New White Culture. He also wrote the text for Red Light: Inside the Sex Industry, with photographs by Sylvia Plachy. [3] Ridgeway co-directed the companion film Blood in the Face, as well as Feed, a documentary on the 1992 presidential campaign.[4] His articles have also appeared in New York Review of Books, Parade, Harper's, The Nation, The Economist, The New York Times Magazine, The Wall Street Journal and other magazines and newspapers. [5]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Goodman, Amy (2006). "Village Voice Shakeup: Top Investigative Journalist Fired, Prize Winning Writers Resign Follwing Merger with New Times Media," (html). Democracy Now website. Retrieved on 2006-04-20.
  2. ^ "The Beginnings" (html). Nader.org website (2004). Retrieved on 2006-04-20.
  3. ^ "Title list for basic search of author: Ridgeway, James" (html). Library of Congress Online Catalogue. Retrieved on 2006-04-20.
  4. ^ "James Ridgeway" (html). Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2006-04-20.
  5. ^ "Author James Ridgeway" (html). Seven Stories Press Web site. Retrieved on 2006-04-20.