Whitney Matheson Explained

Whitney Matheson
Birth Date:21 April 1977
Birth Place:Fredericksburg, Virginia, U.S.
Occupation:Journalist
Subject:Pop culture
Education:University of Tennessee
Notableworks:Pop Candy blog
Spouse:Rhyne Piggott
Children:1
Awards:Best Culture Blog of 2006

Whitney Matheson (born April 21, 1977 in Fredericksburg, Virginia) is a pop culture writer. She was the author of Pop Candy, a popular entertainment blog which was part of USA Today from 1999–2014. She also wrote entertainment and pop culture features for the newspaper.

Matheson has delivered pop-culture commentary on several television networks, including VH1, E!, and G4 TV.

Career

Matheson earned a journalism degree from the University of Tennessee in 1999, and joined USA Today and created Pop Candy that same year.[1] Pop Candy began as a weekly online pop-culture column that covered television, movies, comic books, and music. During this period, Matheson also wrote a daily blog, Hip Clicks. As her web audience grew, Matheson merged Hip Clicks and Pop Candy in 2005 to form the Pop Candy blog. During its tenure, Pop Candy was cited in Wired, Slate, The Rough Guide to Blogging, and on many other entertainment blogs, including Stereogum, Entertainment Weeklys PopWatch, and RollingStone.com.

Editor & Publisher and Mediaweek awarded Pop Candy an EPpy award[2] for the Best Entertainment Blog in 2008. In 2006, the Weblog Awards honored Pop Candy as the Best Culture Blog.[3]

On September 3, 2014, Matheson confirmed that she had been laid off as part of a USA Today drawdown.[4] Soon afterwards she was invited by former USA Today editor-in-chief Ken Paulson to serve as Journalist in Residence at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

On May 13, 2019, Matheson unveiled her digital children's book We Make Comics, illustrated by Genevieve Kote.[5]

Personal life

Matheson lives in Brooklyn, New York. On her Pop Candy blog dated April 13, 2012, Matheson announced she and her husband Rhyne Piggott were expecting their first child. Their daughter was born later that year.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Gorman, Allison. "How journalist Whitney Matheson found herself at the forefront of New Media," Middle Tennessee State News (July 22, 2015).
  2. Web site: Eppy Award winners 2008 . 2010-12-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090130044424/http://royal.reliaserve.com/eppy/winners2008.html . 2009-01-30 . dead .
  3. Weblog Awards website. Dec. 18, 2006. Retrieved 06-17-2008.
  4. Beaujon, Andrew. "USA Today lays off between 60 and 70 staffers," Poynter (Sept. 3, 2014).
  5. Matheson, Whitney. "I Wrote a Kid's Book," WhitneyMatheson.com (May 13, 2019).