General

Power Lunch

Comments Off 30 November 2009

Picture 4CNN recently interviewed me for a piece on Washington’s power lunches. This is a story I tackled two years ago in the magazine, dissecting where and when and why power brokers dine.

As I wrote in the magazine, “Today, as Washington has become known not just for its diplomatic and federal power but also for its technological, financial, and cultural clout, there are dozens of new power venues. While power breakfasts in DC are generally focused around three hotels—the Four Seasons, the Hay-Adams, and the Mayflower—lunch can mean anything from gumbo at DC Coast to veal ravioli at Teatro Goldoni to a steak at the Capital Grille to a sandwich in downtown Bethesda.”

Huffington Post, reacting to the CNN piece today, focused on the transactional nature of many of these lunch spots—they’re close by the Hill often and thus places where lawmakers can raise money easily. That’s certainly a not insignificant part of their appeal. “You’re going to be seen, you’re going to see who else is there, and to sort of hobnob and be part of the club,” I told CNN. “The private rooms, the private dining is an important thing if you’re holding a fundraiser or you’re trying to bring together a group to try to have a private conversation.”

While my lunch favorites rotate through the year, I often end up at the Palm and West End Bistro, both of which are just a few blocks from the office.

General

Recent Media Appearances

Comments Off 27 September 2009

Print:

Television:

Radio:

General

Media Transformation

Comments Off 26 September 2009

The Christian Science Monitor examined this week how the media landscape is evolving. In its article this week, the reporter writes about my transformation from blogger to magazine editor:

“’The best newspapers are going to end up looking like the best blogs, and the best blogs are going to end up looking a lot like the best newspapers,’ predicted a 20-something new-media prodigy named Garrett Graff five years ago. Now, ‘that’s virtually happened,’ Mr. Graff says. In 2005, he made news as the first blogger ever to be issued credentials as part of the White House press corps. This month, he takes over as editor in chief of long-established Washingtonian magazine, with 400,000 monthly readers of print and 400,000 more online.”

Probably the most interesting thing to watch is how the traditional media is giving way so quietly. There’s certainly a lot of attention about the failing of the print media empires, yet the rise of the first online media empires aren’t nearly as well covered. As I told the CSM reporter,  “It’s a really fascinating evolution that I think has happened much more quickly and with less hurrah than most people expected it to.”

General

CBSNews.com Profiles My New Job

Comments Off 24 August 2009

For their segment “Unplugged Under 40,” CBSNews came by my office last week and spent some time talking with me about the magazine and my new job. If you watch the interview, you can see lots of my office and the strange things on my wallsóplus get a nice fisheye lens-view of my nose:
<iframe src=”http://widget.newsinc.com/Single.htm?VID=53655&wid=2″ height=400 width=425 frameborder=no scrolling=no noresize marginwidth=0px marginheight=0px></iframe>

For their segment “Unplugged Under 40,” CBSNews came by my office last week and spent some time talking with me about the magazine and my new job. If you watch the interview, you can see lots of my office and the strange things on my walls—plus get a nice fisheye lens-view of my nose:

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