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Adam Moss
Adam Moss is an American magazine and newspaper editor. Since 2004, he has been the editor-in-chief of ''New York'' magazine. Under his editorship, ''New York'' has repeatedly been recognized for excellence, notably winning Magazine of the Year in 2013, and General Excellence both in print and online in 2010. Overall, ''New York'' has won more National Magazine Awards under his tenure than any other magazine.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Magazine Publishers of America – The Definitive Resource for the Magazine Industry )〕 During this period, he oversaw the development and growth of ''New York's'' website into one repeatedly recognized as among the industry's most innovative and successful. ==Career== Before coming to ''New York,'' Moss worked at the ''New York Times'', where he edited the ''New York Times Magazine'' and served as the paper's assistant managing editor for features, overseeing the Magazine, Book Review, Culture and Style sections. He brought to ''the Times'' a magazine sensibility. "Moss became a guru of this change – an anti-''Times'' sort of figure in the middle of the ''Times''. A magazine person at a newspaper, an openly gay person in a repressed atmosphere, a mild man among bullies and screamers," described media writer Michael Wolff in a 1999 profile of Moss in ''New York'' magazine. When ''Ad Age'' named him Editor of the Year in 2001, the writer Jon Fine called the ''Times Magazine'' "one of the best reads in the business. Mr. Moss smartly and subtly remade the title, from its photography to front of the book, all the while navigating the internal culture of the ''Times''. Under his watch, it became a showcase for thoughtful, long-form journalism. Like few other magazines, it thrives a few steps to the side of celeb-saturated culture and a few steps beyond the typical political polarities.” Moss shifted the balance of writers from ''Times'' staffers to nonfiction writers experienced in magazine journalism. During his time there, the magazine included as regular contributors Michael Lewis, Andrew Sullivan, Michael Pollan, Lynn Hirschberg, Jennifer Egan, and Frank Rich, among others. In 2001, the writer Michael Finkel was discovered to have created composite characters for a story he had written on the African slave trade, a small scandal that was quickly eclipsed at the ''New York Times'' by the much larger one involving Jayson Blair. After the September 11 attacks, Moss and the ''Times Magazine'' created an issue of the magazine called "Remains of the Day"〔 〕 that was published online in its entirety that Friday, the first time the magazine published in digital form before print. Its 2001 story “One Awful Night in Thanh Phong” revealed former senator and one-time presidential candidate Bob Kerrey to have led a particularly brutal attack on a peasant village in Vietnam that one of his fellow team members described in terms that invoked some similarities to the My-Lai massacre. Mr. Kerrey disputed the characterization. The story was nominated that year for a Pulitzer Prize. Previous jobs also included six years in various editorial capacities at ''Esquire'' magazine. Northwestern journalism professor David Abrahmson credits Moss's work at ''Esquire'' in assigning a series of pieces on the business of entertainment with "having a serious effect on what we all regard as the normal content of the mainstream media today, with its unremitting emphasis on not only celebrity, but also the economics of the celebrity-driven industries."
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