Nico Pitney Explained

Nico Pitney (born 1981)[1] is an American journalist, editor and media executive who has helped lead several prominent left-leaning media outlets, including HuffPost and NowThis.

Life

Pitney was born in Tokyo[1] and attended the University of California, Santa Barbara.[2] Pitney worked as Deputy Research Director at the Center for American Progress, where he helped found, and was Managing Editor of, their blog, ThinkProgress.[3] Pitney joined The Huffington Post in 2007 and served in a variety of capacities, including Politics Editor and DC Bureau Chief during the 2008 Presidential election, National Editor, Executive Editor, and Managing Editor of the Huffington Post Media Group.

Pitney gained prominence during the 2009 Iranian election protests, where he liveblogged the protest for HuffPost by aggregating social media posts from Iranians, including videos and tweets.[4] [5] According to Pitney, over 100,000 comments were left on the popular blog.[6] As a result, Pitney was asked by the Obama administration to be prepared to pose a question from an Iranian at a June 23, 2009 press conference at the White House. In a departure from typical press conference protocol, Pitney was called on second and asked Obama under what conditions the United States would accept the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. While Pitney did not know if he would be called on to ask a question, and President Obama did not know what question would be asked, a number of critics, including members of the White House press corps charged that the question was an example of improper collusion between the White House and a journalist.[7] [8] [9] [10] [11] One of the most prominent critics was Dana Milbank of The Washington Post.[12] Pitney and Milbank engaged in a heated and personal debate on the CNN program Reliable Sources about the question,[13] and according to Pitney, Milbank whispered to Pitney during a commercial break "You're such a dick".[14] This incident spawned the Twitter hashtag #Dickwhisperer.[15]

Pitney left The Huffington Post in 2012 to travel the world and blog about his experience with his wife Karina Newton, former new media director for House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.[16] In 2013, Pitney returned to The Huffington Post as head of product.[17]

In 2017, he joined NowThis where he served as Senior Vice President and News and Politics Director.[18] [19] During his tenure, NowThis became the #1 most engaged news brand worldwide, amassing roughly 2.6 billion views monthly across social media platforms, according to Tubular Labs.[20] According to The New Yorker, Pitney led the newsroom and also hosted videos and conducted interviews with a number of leading politicians, including former president Barack Obama, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Hillary Clinton, and more.[21]

In February 2021, Pitney together with Faiz Shakir launched More Perfect Union, a nonprofit media and advocacy outlet modeled on ThinkProgress.[22] Shakir describes More Perfect Union, which creates video and graphics to support labor issues, as "ThinkProgress for a digital age."[23]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nico Pitney Knows Politics . . 7 March 2008 . 10 July 2013 . Belonsky, Andrew.
  2. Web site: Nico Pitney . . 10 July 2013.
  3. Web site: Nico Pitney . Huffington Post . 10 July 2013.
  4. Book: Flynt Leverett. Hillary Mann Leverett. Going to Tehran: Why the United States Must Come to Terms with the Islamic Republic of Iran. 2013. Henry Holt and Company. 978-0-8050-9419-0. 265.
  5. Book: Yahya R. Kamalipour. Media, Power, and Politics in the Digital Age: The 2009 Presidential Election Uprising in Iran. 2010. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 978-1-4422-0417-1. 113.
  6. Web site: Iran Updates (VIDEO): Live-Blogging The Uprising . Huffington Post . July 14, 2009 . 9 July 2013 . Pitney, Nico.
  7. Web site: HuffPost's Nico Pitney Asks Question About Iran At White House Press Conference (VIDEO) . Huffington Post . 2009-07-24 . 9 July 2013.
  8. Web site: Obama calls on HuffPost for Iran question UPDATE . . June 23, 2009 . 9 July 2013 . Calderone, Michael . Michael Calderone.
  9. Web site: HuffPo's Question at Obama News Conference Sparks a Media Flap . . June 24, 2009 . 9 July 2013 . Phillips, Kate.
  10. Web site: The Crucifixion of Nico Pitney . . Jun 24, 2009 . 9 July 2013 . Cooper, Matthew.
  11. Web site: Media Playground: Obama Calls on HuffPost, Michael Calderone Pouts, Ben Smith Calls Us Names, Dana Milbank Gets His Facts All Wrong . Huffington Post . 23 June 2009 . Huffington, Arianna . Arianna Huffington.
  12. News: Washington Sketch: Welcome to 'The Obama Show' . Washington Post . June 24, 2009 . 9 July 2013 . Milbank, Dana.
  13. Web site: Media Unfair to Sanford?; Coverage of Michael Jackson's Death . CNN . Reliable Sources . June 28, 2009 .
  14. Web site: Debating The Iran Question On CNN's Reliable Sources . Huffington Post . 28 June 2009 . 9 July 2013 . Pitney, Nico.
  15. Web site:
    1. Dickwhisperer: A History
    . . 29 June 2009 . Garber, Megan.
  16. Web site: Vamburkar . Meenal . Nancy Pelosi Taps ThinkProgress Editor As Director Of New Media . . 2020-04-01 . https://archive.today/20130710025351/http://www.mediaite.com/online/nancy-pelosi-taps-thinkprogress-editor-as-director-of-new-media/ . 2013-07-10 . 8 May 2012 . unfit.
  17. News: Nico Pitney returning to Huffington Post . Washington Post . 31 January 2013 . 10 July 2013 . Wemple, Eric.
  18. Web site: NowThis to expand into investigative journalism and long-form video . . 6 March 2017 . Patel, Sahil.
  19. Web site: January 2022. "Nico Pitney" Linkedin..
  20. Web site: NowThis Ranked No. 1 News Brand Across Mobile Globally, Cross-Platform By Tubular Labs - Groupnine. 2022-01-23. www.groupninemedia.com. en.
  21. 2019-10-10. "We're in the Business of Stopping Thumbs": NowThis News and the Politics of Social Video. 2022-01-23. The New Yorker. en-US.
  22. Web site: Why the Media Loves Labor Now . Smith . Ben . New York Times . More Perfect Union, a nonprofit news outlet .. quietly started in February. It is led, in part, by Faiz Shakir, the former manager of Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign, and Nico Pitney, a former top editor at The Huffington Post and NowThisNews. . November 7, 2021 . November 13, 2021.
  23. Web site: Sanders' campaign chief aiming to push Biden leftward . Markay . Lachlan . Axios . 'This is ThinkProgress for a digital age,' he said, with an emphasis on video and graphics that would be central 'if we were relaunching ThinkProgress in this modern environment.' . March 11, 2021 . November 13, 2021.