A. G. Sulzberger

Chairman

Birthday August 5, 1980

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Washington, D.C., U.S.

Age 43 years old

Nationality United States

#29188 Most Popular

1896

Sulzberger is the fourth-generation descendant of Adolph Ochs, who bought the New York Times in 1896.

The Times has been managed and published by Adolph Ochs's family since that date.

1980

Arthur Gregg Sulzberger (born August 5, 1980) is an American journalist serving as chairman of The New York Times Company and publisher of its flagship newspaper, The New York Times.

Sulzberger was born in Washington, D.C., on August 5, 1980, to Gail Gregg and Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr.. He is of German ancestry.

His paternal grandfather, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, was Jewish, and the rest of his family is of Christian background, including Episcopalian and Congregationalist.

2003

He attended Ethical Culture Fieldston School and Brown University, where he graduated in 2003 with a major in political science.

At Brown, Sulzberger worked briefly for The Brown Daily Herald as a contributing writer.

2004

After being encouraged by Brown journalism professor Tracy Breton to apply, he interned at The Providence Journal from 2004 to 2006, working from the paper's office in Wakefield.

While there, he revealed that membership of the Narragansett Lions Club was not open to women.

Despite threats from the club to withdraw their advertising if the story ran, the Journal published Sulzberger's story.

The club began admitting women a few months later.

2006

Sulzberger worked as a reporter for The Oregonian newspaper in Portland from 2006 to 2009, writing more than 300 pieces about local government and public life, including a series of investigative exposés on misconduct by Multnomah County Sheriff Bernie Giusto.

2009

Sulzberger began writing for The New York Times as a metro reporter in February 2009, which published his first article on March 2.

He became a national correspondent, heading the Kansas City bureau and covering the Midwest region.

2013

In 2013, he was tapped by then-executive editor Jill Abramson to lead the team that produced the Times' Innovation Report, an internal assessment of the challenges facing the Times in the digital age.

He was the lead author of the 97-page report, which documented in "clinical detail" how the Times was losing ground to "nimbler competitors" and "called for revolutionary changes".

2014

The Innovation Report was leaked to BuzzFeed News in March 2014.

2015

Sulzberger was named associate editor for newsroom strategy in August 2015.

2016

In October 2016, he was named deputy publisher, putting him in line to succeed his father as publisher.

His cousins Sam Dolnick, now assistant managing editor of the Times, and David Perpich, now head of standalone products and a member of the New York Times Company board, were also considered for the role.

2017

The 2017 film Kodachrome, directed by Mark Raso, is based on his 2010 article about a rural community that became the last place to develop Kodachrome film.

On December 14, 2017, it was announced that Sulzberger would take over as publisher on January 1, 2018.

He is the sixth member of the Ochs-Sulzberger family to serve in the role.

Though The New York Times Company is public, all voting shares are controlled by the Ochs-Sulzberger Family Trust.

SEC filings state the trust's "primary objective" is that the Times continues "as an independent newspaper, entirely fearless, free of ulterior influence and unselfishly devoted to the public welfare".

On his first day as publisher, Sulzberger wrote an essay noting that he was taking over in a "period of exciting innovation and growth", but also a "period of profound challenge".

He committed to holding the Times "to the highest standards of independence, rigor, and fairness".

As publisher, he oversees the news outlet's journalism and business operations.

Sulzberger has been the principal architect of the news outlet's digital transformation and has led its efforts to become a subscriber-first business.

However, this view was refuted by The Economist, which published a study evidencing a gradual leftward shift in the partisan slant of The New York Times, beginning in 2017.

2018

He became publisher on January 1, 2018, succeeding his father Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr.., although the elder Sulzberger remained chairman of The New York Times Company until the end of 2020.

A.G. Sulzberger became the chairman of The New York Times Company on January 1, 2021.

Sulzberger met with President Donald Trump at the White House on July 20, 2018.

The meeting was off-the-record, but after President Trump tweeted about it eight days later, Sulzberger "pushed back hard" to dispute the President's characterization of the meeting.

Sulzberger said in a statement that at the meeting, he "told the president directly that I thought that his [anti-press] language was not just divisive but increasingly dangerous. I warned that this inflammatory language is contributing to a rise in threats against journalists and will lead to violence."

According to anonymous sources within the newspaper's staff, upon taking his position in 2018 Sulzburger "told employees explicitly that his biggest concern was that the paper’s audience saw it as a 'liberal rag...' [his] vision for the paper is to change that perception and court conservative readers."

2019

Sulzberger met with President Trump in the Oval Office a second time, on January 31, 2019, for an on-the-record interview along with Times reporters Peter Baker and Maggie Haberman.

He has said that an independent press "is not a liberal ideal or a progressive ideal or a Democratic ideal. It's an American ideal."

2020

In that role, he was part of the group that outlined the Times' plan to double the news outlet's digital revenue by 2020 and increase collaboration between departments, dubbed "Our Path Forward".

In 2020, Sulzberger voiced concern about the disappearance of local news, saying that "if we don't find a path forward" for local journalism, "I believe we'll continue to watch society grow more polarized, less empathetic, more easily manipulated by powerful interests and more untethered from the truth."