Given below is a list
of the top entertainment writers in
the city of Los Angeles. They are the best at what they do, and accordingly
write some of the finest infomercial articles on filmS, cinema, celebrities and
the entire film culture. Accordingly, they deserve their spot at the top
position. Read on to find out what they have worked on and how far they have
struggled to get to this position of being one of the top moguls of news and
entertainment.
Betsy
Sharkey
Betsy Sharkey, film
critic for the Los Angeles Times, is a veteran columnist who started her vocation
with the Dallas Morning News. A graduate of Texas Christian University with a
lone wolf's in news coverage, she has composed broadly about entertainment for
a differing extent of national productions around them in The New York Times,
TV Guide and Entertainment Weekly, where she is a helping critic for Critical
Mass. She joined the Times in '98 as a TV proofreader, then film supervisor and
an entertainment editorial manager before being named film critic. She has
co-written two journals for Oscar-winning performers: "Searching for
Gatsby" with Faye Dunaway and "I'll Scream Later" with Marlee
Matlin.
Kenneth
Turan
Kenneth Turan is a
famous film critic and works for many magazines and dailies. He has been a
staff writer for the Washington Post and TV Guide, and served as the Times'
book review editorial manager. A graduate of Swarthmore College and Columbia
University's Graduate School of Journalism, he is the co-creator of Call Me
Anna: The Autobiography of Patty Duke.
Charles
McNulty
Charles McNulty is the
boss theatre critic for the Los Angeles Times daily paper and a beneficiary of
Cornell University's prestigious Nathan Award for tragic criticism. He served
as administrator of the Pulitzer Prize show jury. McNulty was occupied with the
year 2005 as the Times daily paper's head theatre critic after an exhaustive 4
year look. He was awhile ago a theatre critic and editorial manager for the
Village Voice daily paper, where he additionally led the daily papers Obie
Award board. McNulty acquired his doctorate in dramaturgy and dramatization
criticism from the Yale School of Drama. He has taught at Yale, New York
University, the New School of Social Research, University of California and Los
Angeles and CUNY. He was leader of the Masters of Fine Arts program in
dramaturgy at Brooklyn College.
No comments:
Post a Comment