Eric Paul Newcomer | |
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Born | September 7, 1989 |
Alma mater | Harvard College |
Occupation | Journalist |
Years active | 2012 to present |
Website | http://newcomer.co |
Eric Newcomer (born September 7, 1989) is an American journalist known for reporting on Silicon Valley and the startup industry. He is the founder of Newcomer, a media outlet that covers startups and venture capital, which launched in 2020. [1]
Newcomer was born in York, Pennsylvania, and raised in Macon, Georgia. After graduating from Central High School in 2008, he attended Harvard College, where he graduated in 2012 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Philosophy. [2] At Harvard, he served as associate managing editor for The Harvard Crimson and won awards for investigative reporting on a four-part series related to sexual assault at the university. [3]
While at Harvard, Newcomer had internships at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and the Tampa Bay Times. [3] Later, he worked as a James Reston Reporting Fellow for The New York Times. [3] He was the first employee at The Information, joining as a reporter in 2013. [4]
In 2014 Newcomer joined Bloomberg LP as a technology reporter. While at Bloomberg, he published an article about then- Uber CEO Travis Kalanick that included a video of Kalanick arguing with an Uber driver. [5] The article contributed to Kalanick’s resignation as CEO of Uber. [6]
In October 2020, he launched his own venture capital newsletter, Newcomer. [7] As of July 2022, Newcomer had over 1,900 paying subscribers. [4] In 2023, Newcomer was one of many Substack publishers who publicly announced personal investments in the company as a show of support. [8] He also runs a weekly podcast containing top thought leaders in startups and venture capital. Past speakers on the podcast have included Kara Swisher and Emad Mostaque.
On March 30, 2023, Newcomer and voice-AI gaming startup Volley co-hosted an artificial intelligence summit in San Francisco. Speakers included Emad Mostaque, Adam D’Angelo and other CEOs of AI companies and venture capital investors. [9] Over 200 founders, investors, engineers and entrepreneurs attended the one-day Cerebral Valley AI Summit. [10] Attendees included Databricks CEO Ali Ghodsi and MosaicML CEO Naveen Rao, who met for the first time at the event. Within months, Databricks acquired MosaicML for $1.3 billion. [11]
The event contributed to the popularization of the nickname " Cerebral Valley" for the neighborhood of Hayes Valley, San Francisco, given after many AI startups established headquarters there. [12]
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