The New York Observer

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The New York Observer
Type
Format Tabloid

Owner The New York Observer, LLC
Publisher Jared Kushner
Editor Peter Kaplan
Founded 1987
Headquarters 915 Broadway, 9th Floor
New York, NY 10010
Flag of the United States United States

Website: observer.com

The New York Observer is a weekly newspaper first published in New York City on September 22, 1987, by Arthur L. Carter, a very successful former investment banker with publishing interests. The Observer focuses on the city's culture, real estate, the media, politics and the entertainment and publishing industries. It covers the rich and powerful of New York with an unusual depth of coverage although has been criticized for its narrow focus on Manhattan and its liberal political perspective.[citation needed]

It is perhaps best known for publishing Candace Bushnell's column on Manhattan's social life on which the hit television series Sex and the City was loosely based. Published every Wednesday, the newspaper's editorial team is led by distinguished ex-PBS journalist Peter Kaplan, with other writers and editors including Joe Conason, Alexandra Jacobs, Tom McGeveran, Tom Scocca, Peter M. Stevenson, Hilton Kramer, Andrew Sarris, Richard Brookhiser, Michael Thomas, John Heilpern, Robert Gottlieb, Nicholas von Hoffman, Steve Kornacki and Rex Reed. It is visually distinctive because of its salmon-colored pages and sketch illustrations, á la La Gazzetta dello Sport. Henry Rollins once described it as "the curiously pink newspaper."

The New York Observer asserts to advertisers that it delivers Manhattan’s most affluent, educated and influential consumers, with the average net worth of its readership exceeding $1.7 million and 96% of readers being college graduates. It has a paid circulation of 51,000. The Observer operates several blogs: The Politicker, the Daily Transom, the Media Mob, and the Real Estate.

[edit] Ownership

The publisher and original owner, Arthur Carter has had other publishing interests in the past including the Litchfield County Times. At one time, he was a part-owner in The East Hampton Star. Carter received an A.B. in French literature from Brown University and an M.B.A. in Finance from the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College. He spent twenty-five years in investment banking until 1981, when he founded the Litchfield County Times in New Milford, Connecticut. He owned it for twenty years until selling to Journal Register Company, later also selling his 50-percent interest in The East Hampton Star in 2003. He has been an adjunct professor of philosophy and journalism at New York University and is currently a trustee. He is also a sculptor of some acclaim. Despite his "registered opportunist" political beliefs, from 1985 to 1995 he owned The Nation.

In July 2006, Jared Kushner, a 25-year-old law student and son of a wealthy New Jersey developer, Charles Kushner, purchased the paper for just under $10 million. Kushner, a Harvard graduate, is currently pursuing a M.B.A. at New York University. In April of 2007 Bob Sommer became president.[1]

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