From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American journalist
Kate Kelly
Born (1975-02-24 ) February 24, 1975 (age 49) Nationality American Education
Columbia University (
BA ) Occupation(s) Journalist Writer Spouse
Kyle Pope Children 3
Kate Kelly (born February 24, 1975) is an American reporter for
The New York Times .
Biography
Kelly was raised in
Washington, D.C. She is a graduate of the
National Cathedral School
[1] after which she attended
Columbia University where she received a B.A. in history in 1997.
[2]
[3] After school, she worked for
Time magazine and the
New York Observer where she wrote a weekly residential real-estate column, "Manhattan Transfers."
[2] she then worked for
The Wall Street Journal for ten years as an investigative journalist and then in 2010 she was hired by
CNBC as an on-air reporter.
[2] In 2016, she was hired by
The New York Times as their business reporter.
[2]
Kelly is also the author, with
Robin Pogrebin , of The Education of
Brett Kavanaugh : An Investigation with a publishing date in September 2019 from Portfolio Books, a division of Penguin Random House. Before publication, the Times published a widely criticised
[4] essay adapted from the book that primarily addressed accusations about an incident with
Deborah Ramirez and another incident alleged by
Max Stier , both of which occurred at Yale.
[5] Before Kavanaugh's confirmation in October, 2018, Pogrebin, also at the Times and a classmate of Kavanaugh at Yale, and Kelly, were featured in a podcast about what the then-judge's classmates were saying concerning his nomination to the
Supreme Court .
[6]
Personal life
Kelly is married to editor
Kyle Pope ;
[7] she has three daughters.
[2]
Awards
References
^ Millins, Luke (September 17, 2019).
"Interview: The Coauthor of 'The Education of Brett Kavanaugh' Explains How She Dug Into DC's Private-School Scene" .
Washingtonian .
^
a
b
c
d
e
"A new prime time colleague: Kate Kelly of CNBC joins Business Day" .
The New York Times . December 2, 2016.
^
"Columbia Daily Spectator 14 October 1998 — Columbia Spectator" . spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu . Retrieved 2021-07-07 .
^ Calderon, Michael,
"Times' handling of Kavanaugh story draws widespread criticism" .
Politico Retrieved 2019-09-17.
^ Pogrebin, Robin, and Kate Kelly,
"Brett Kavanaugh Fit In With the Privileged Kids. She Did Not." , New York Times, September 14, 2019. Retrieved 2019-09-16.
^
Barbaro, Michael (host),
"Kavanaugh's classmates speak out" (27:03 min. audio) , New York Times, October 2, 2018. Retrieved 2019-09-16.
^ Pompeo, Joe (April 20, 2010).
"Kate Kelly: CNBC's New Charlie Gasparino" .
Business Insider .
Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline and/or Beat Writing (1985–2000)
1985-1989 1990-1999 2000
Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline or Beat Writing (2002)
2002
Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline Writing (2003–2007)
2003–2007
2003:
Rebecca Blumenstein ,
Carrick Mollenkamp ,
Susan Pulliam ,
Jared Sandberg ,
Deborah Solomon ,
Shawn Young ,
Gregory Zuckerman
2004:
Susanne Craig ,
Ianthe Jeanne Dugan ,
Theo Francis ,
Kate Kelly
2005:
David Barboza ,
Steve Lohr ,
John Markoff ,
Gary Rivlin ,
Andrew Ross Sorkin
2006:
Michele Besso ,
Peter Bothum ,
Robin Brown ,
Steven Church ,
Ted Griffith ,
Maureen Milford ,
Jeff Montgomery ,
Gary Soulsman ,
Luladey B. Tadesse ,
Christopher Yasiejko
2007:
Ann Davis ,
Henny Sender ,
Gregory Zuckerman
Gerald Loeb Award for Beat Writing (2001, 2003–2010)
2001; 2003–2009 2010
Gerald Loeb Award for Beat Reporting (2011–2023)
2011–2019
2011:
Daniel Golden ,
John Hechinger ,
John Lauerman
2012:
John Fauber
2013:
Tom Bergin
2014:
Ivan Penn
2015:
Eric Lipton ,
Ben Protess ,
Nicholas Confessore ,
Brooke Williams
2016:
John Carreyrou ,
Michael Siconolfi ,
Christopher Weaver
2017:
Joe Fox ,
Len De Groot ,
Emily Alpert Reyes ,
David Zahniser
2018:
Julia Angwin ,
Hannes Grassegger ,
Je Larson ,
Noam Scheiber ,
Ariana Tobin ,
Madeleine Varner
2019:
Ranjani Chakraborty ,
Peter Gosselin ,
Ariana Tobin
2020–2023
2020 (tie):
Dominic Gates ,
Mike Baker ,
Steve Miletich ,
Lewis Kamb
2020 (tie):
Katherine Blunt ,
Dave Cole ,
Russell Gold ,
Renée Rigdon ,
Yaryna Serkez ,
Rebecca Smith
2021 (tie):
Jenn Abelson ,
Abha Bhattarai ,
Nicole Dungca ,
Kimberly Kindy ,
Robert Klemko ,
Meryl Kornfield ,
Taylor Telford
2021 (tie):
Patience Haggin ,
Cara Lombardo ,
Dana Mattioli ,
Shane Shifflett
2022:
Emily Glazer ,
Keach Hagey ,
Jeff Horwitz ,
Newley Purnell ,
Justin Scheck ,
Deepa Seetharaman ,
Sam Schechner ,
Georgia Wells
2023:
Ian Allison ,
Nick Baker ,
Nikhilesh De ,
Reiller Decker ,
Sam Kessler ,
Cheyene Ligon ,
Sam Reynolds ,
Tracy Wang
(1993–1999) (2000–2009) (2010–2019)
International National Other