
After
an extensive search for its next editor-in-chief,
The Atlantic has appointed Jeffrey Goldberg, the magazine's national correspondent since 2007.
He replaces James Bennet, who
left The Atlantic this May to become the editorial-page editor of The New York Times.
The appointment is effective immediately. He is The Atlantic’s 14th
editor since it was founded in 1857.
Goldberg will oversee editorial in print, digital and video, as well as guide the editorial teams at CityLab and the company’s events
division, Atlantic LIVE.
He will work closely with The Atlantic’s magazine editor Scott Stossel, editor of TheAtlantic.com J.J. Gould and Atlantic Studios general manager and
executive producer Kasia Cieplak-mayr von Baldegg on video.
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Goldberg told The New York Times he plans to focus on “growing quickly on all platforms while maintaining
Atlantic-level standards and quality.” He has written 11 cover stories for The Atlantic. His in-depth article based on interviews with Barack Obama, “The Obama
Doctrine,” spread across 21 pages in the magazine’s April issue and was widely acclaimed.
He was also one of the authors for the magazine's announcement endorsing Hillary
Clinton for president, only the third presidential endorsement in the magazine’s history.
Goldberg was a former Mideast correspondent, and former Washington Correspondent of
The New Yorker, as well as a writer for The New York Times Magazine and New York, where he covered organized crime.
Goldberg is taking on
The Atlantic’s
editorial operations as the publisher aggressively grows in the digital space.
The Atlantic’s online audience rose to 19 million unique online visitors in the U.S., a roughly 50%
increase from August 2015, according to comScore. Per the
NYT, the company said it expected its total revenue to increase 20% this year.