Amy Wallace (Pullitzer): Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
| name        = Amy Wallace
| name        = Amy Wallace

Revision as of 02:55, 3 January 2024

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Amy Wallace
Occupation journalist
Known for has described how tackling emotionally charged scientific topics has triggered sexist attacks

Amy Wallace is an American journalist. Much of Wallace's writing has been related to business or technology.

Kenneth Kaufmann praised Wallace's coverage of the Betty Broderick story, asserting her article on the story, in the LA Times magazine played a key role in developing the script for the 1992 tv-movie "A woman scorned".[1]

In 2009 Keven Roderick wrote an article profiling Wallace in LA Observed.[2]

In January 2014 Wallace wrote an op-ed in the New York Times that triggered wide comment.[3]

In 2009 Joanna Pearlstein, editor of Wired magazine, published a profile of Wallace, after an article Wallace had written on the meme that a side-effect of the routine vaccinations of young children had lead to an increase in autism.[4]

An article she wrote, titled "a very dangerous boy" was cited in Neiman Storyboard's 2013 Best of Narrative roundup.[5]

References

  1. Luke Ford (2004). The Producers: Profiles in Frustration. ISBN 9780595320165. Retrieved on 2015-12-15. 
  2. Kevin Roderick. Amy Wallace finds some life peace, LA Observed, 2009-12-15. Retrieved on 2015-12-15. “Journalist Amy Wallace, editor-at-large at Los Angeles magazine these days, has a self-exploration piece in More magazine about how she came to trust in the cosmos that life was going to turn out OK.”
  3. Amy Wallace. Life as a Female Journalist: Hot or Not?, New York Times, 2014-01-19, p. A17. Retrieved on 2014-01-20. “What especially alarmed me about what happened to Ms. Harmon and me is that it was set in motion by people and organizations who are out in the open — a signal that this kind of attack is broadly seen as acceptable, or even funny.”
  4. Joanna Pearlstein. Who is this Amy Wallace anyway?, Wired magazine, 2009-10-29. Retrieved on 2014-01-20. “She is NOT the daughter of Irving Wallace and has NOT written a book about her affair with Carlos Casteneda (although she has met the lovely woman who did). She is also not a pharmaceutical lobbyist.”
  5. Kevin Roderick. New year news, notes and reads, LA Observed, 2014-01-01. Retrieved on 2014-01-20. ““A Soldier’s Wife” by Chris Goffard in the Los Angeles Times, “Coronado High” by Joshuah Bearman in The Atavist and “A very dangerous boy” by Amy Wallace in GQ were cited in the Best of Narrative, 2013 roundup by Nieman Storyboard.”