Anna Holmes | |
---|---|
Born |
California, United States |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | New York University |
Known for | Founder of the Jezebel blog |
Awards | Mirror Award for Best Commentary, 2012 |
Website |
annaholmes |
Anna Holmes is an American writer and editor. In 2007, she founded the Gawker Media women-focused site Jezebel.
Holmes was born in California and studied journalism at New York University.
In 2007, she founded Jezebel. Writing for Mother Jones, Tasneem Raja says Holmes developed "a site for women interested in both fashion and how the models were treated. She built it into a traffic behemoth, with 32 million monthly pageviews and beloved features like Photoshop of Horrors and Crap Email From a Dude." [1] Rebecca Carroll described Holmes's Jezebel launch as drawing "immediate attention with its off-color humor (similar in tone to Gawker, but more so a refreshingly new tone altogether), feminine bluster and fearless, pointed criticism of mainstream women’s magazines, an industry in which Holmes worked for many years, for perpetuating unattainable ideals of beauty and an endless (heterosexual) preoccupation with men." [2] Holmes served as editor-in-chief until she left the site in 2010.
She is a columnist for the New York Times Sunday Book Review [3] and has previously served as editorial director at Fusion. [4] She joined Fusion as editor of digital voices and storytelling in 2014, part of a "Web talent grab for a fledgling TV channel: [f]irst Felix Salmon, now a much-admired writer and editor."
Her work has appeared in The New Yorker and Time. In April 2016, Holmes joined First Look Media as senior vice-president of editorial to develop a new media property focused on visual storytelling. [5]
Holmes was a staff writer for Glamour. [6]
Released today, The Book of Jezebel: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Lady Things, edited by Jezebel's founding editor Anna Holmes with contributions from a group of female writers, include Slate contributors Jessica Grose, Amanda Marcotte, and yours truly, is both an earnest celebration of the historical and pop cultural figures that have shaped women's lives in the 21st century and a compendium of elaborate menstruation jokes.
it's a work of art, a humor book, a compendium of writing from an array of notable names, and an excellent guide to important topics of our time.
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