Los Angeles Times Names Joel Sappell to New Masthead Position of Assistant Managing Editor and Executive Editor, Interactive
October 05 2005 - 3:12PM
PR Newswire (US)
New Position Designed to Better Align Times' Newsroom and Website
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 5 /PRNewswire/ -- Joel Sappell has been appointed
to the new masthead position of Assistant Managing Editor and
Executive Editor, Interactive, it was announced today by Los
Angeles Times Editor Dean Baquet. The new position is designed to
better align the newsroom and The Times' website. Sappell, who will
report to Baquet and Robertson Barrett, general
manager/Interactive, will oversee editorial content on latimes.com
and calendarlive.com, and new interactive initiatives. The
editorial staffs of latimes.com and calendarlive.com will report to
him, as will the Extended News Desk and Multimedia staffs in the
newsroom. "It is a testament to the importance of the Web that we
are placing one of our most creative and aggressive editors in
charge of the editorial part of the site," said Baquet. "Joel will
work closely with the newsroom to create new stories and features
for the Web, and to encourage all departments to regard latimes.com
and our other interactive products as vital, though distinctly
different, parts of The Times," said Baquet. "It has become clear
over time that latimes.com is a different animal, but one that
should be guided by the same bedrock principles as the newsroom. It
also is an important part of our future." "Joel's twin strengths in
entertainment and local news make him well-qualified to lead new
online sites and services such as TheEnvelope.com, a push in
entertainment coverage by the end of the year, and our extended
Southern California information and services online," said Barrett.
Since 2002, Sappell had led The Times' business entertainment
coverage as senior entertainment editor. He also edited the
newspaper's coverage of the groping allegations against Arnold
Schwarzenegger. From 1997 to 2002, he was Metro projects editor. As
city editor from 1994 to 1997, he directed coverage of the O.J.
Simpson case, and helped oversee The Times' Pulitzer Prize-winning
coverage of the 1994 Northridge earthquake. He joined The Times in
1981 as a Metro staff writer specializing in investigative
reporting. Sappell earlier served as a business writer for the New
York Daily News and a projects reporter for the Los Angeles Herald
Examiner. He was a member of a second team that won a Pulitzer
Prize, that one for The Times' coverage of the 1992 Los Angeles
riots. His other journalism awards include a George Polk Award for
local reporting, American Bar Assn.'s Silver Gavel Award and
California Bar Assn.'s Gold Medallion as well as two Times Mirror
Journalist of the Year and three Los Angeles Times Editorial
awards. A native of Los Angeles, Sappell attended California State
University, Long Beach, where he majored in journalism. The Los
Angeles Times, a Tribune Publishing company, is the largest
metropolitan daily newspaper in the country and the winner of 37
Pulitzer Prizes, including two this year. The Times publishes five
daily regional editions, for the Los Angeles metropolitan area,
Orange County, Ventura County, the San Fernando Valley, and the
Inland Empire of Riverside and San Bernardino counties, as well as
a National edition. Additional information about The Times is
available at http://www.latimes.com/mediacenter. DATASOURCE: Los
Angeles Times CONTACT: Martha Goldstein of the Los Angeles Times,
+1-213-237-3727, Web site: http://www.latimes.com/
http://calendarlive.com/
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