Two-time National Magazine Award winner Michael Wolff is a columnist for Vanity Fair and the founder of news aggregator newser.com. His latest book is The Man Who Owns the News, a biography of Rupert Murdoch, based on nine months of interviews with Murdoch and his family and associates. His work has been widely anthologized and appeared in numerous publications, including New York magazine, where he was a long-time columnist. He has also been an entrepreneur involved with the start-up of many businesses, including, in 1993, his first Internet company.

Blog Entries by Michael Wolff

'Let's Talk About Health Care.' 'Please, God, No!'

Posted December 21, 2009 | 10:03 AM (EST)


What is in the health care bill? The Senate version? The House version?

I have been looking through the coverage--the vast sturm und drang about it--and can't find any news organization that has in any accessible way summarized the damn thing and made it easy reading.

In essence,...

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Chuck Schumer Speaks for Me

Posted December 18, 2009 | 12:54 PM (EST)


Among the worst things you can do in upper-middle-class, politically-correct, don't-call-attention-to-yourself culture is insult a service person. This is counter-intuitive because one of the things that is most often done in upper-middle-class culture is complain about service.

Sen. Chuck Schumer is in hot water because he seems to have...

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Berlusconi Strikes Back

Posted December 17, 2009 | 11:35 AM (EST)


Some people have all the luck.

Or, some people, familiar with adversity and reversals of fortune, know merely to wait until someone else hands you a trump card.

Silvio Berlusconi, struck rudely and brutally in the face with a souvenir statue, is turning the tables on his critics. All...

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Is Tiger Woods Good or Bad for You?

1 Comments | Posted December 16, 2009 | 01:03 PM (EST)


There is a more and more insistent question being asked by right-thinking people about why we dwell so obsessively on the domestic problems of celebrities. It's an issue we debate all the time at Newser, where we dwell with quite some verve on these matters: How much is too much?...

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How Much Is This Post Worth?

Posted December 14, 2009 | 01:00 PM (EST)


Jason Calacanis, one of the longest-lasting web entrepreneurs, has made an interesting proposal to Newser, among others. He wants Newser, or the New York Times, or the Huffington Post, or Gawker, or the Wall Street Journal to buy one of his blog posts for $1,000--or actually, for the rights to...

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Peace Prize: President Says Piss Off

5 Comments | Posted December 11, 2009 | 02:55 PM (EST)


The president accepted his Peace Prize by arguing for war.

It had really seemed like he would need to thread a needle in Oslo, having to graciously to accept an award for bringing peace to the world while he primes a battlefield. He had to mollify or triangulate his...

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I'm Glad a Bonus Is Not My Problem

1 Comments | Posted December 10, 2009 | 12:50 PM (EST)


If you are the manager of a Wall Street firm, or one of its communications advisers, what you are thinking about right now is this: How do we spin the bonuses?

The 2009 bonus numbers, which will shortly begin to leak out, are, for the banks, a problem perhaps...

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Why Tiger Woods Prefers Blondes

3 Comments | Posted December 9, 2009 | 01:53 PM (EST)


Here is the dumbest newspaper article I've read in quite a long time. I mean dumb not just in the sense of failing to understand what most everyone else surely understands, or of taking a rolling-on-the-floor obvious point and considering it to be an original one, but of being...

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Amanda Is America

Posted December 8, 2009 | 12:40 PM (EST)


Not too long ago, Amanda Knox, convicted the other day in Italy of murdering her junior-year-abroad roommate, Meredith Kercher, was "Foxy Knoxy." Now she is martyred Amanda, a tabloid Joan of Arc, an immensely sympathetic character at the center of a monstrous international miscarriage of justice.

Because...

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Climate Change: How Come US Newspapers Don't Like This Issue?

2 Comments | Posted December 7, 2009 | 01:03 PM (EST)


My friend Ian Katz, a senior editorial figure at the Guardian newspaper in London, and a prime mover of an initiative to create one editorial on climate change that a coalition of newspapers around the world publishes today, writes to ask my opinion of "why no major US newspapers...

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Tiger Woods Is Innocent

3 Comments | Posted December 4, 2009 | 01:11 PM (EST)


It is good for the media business that Tiger Woods has, apparently, never read a tabloid newspaper or watched a tabloid show. Nobody may have ever been so unsavvy as Tiger.

The Tiger image--uncomplicated, unspoiled, unworldly, utterly game-focused, which is now seemingly being debunked by events and by the...

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Comcast and NBC: Curse of the Moguls Strikes Again

1 Comments | Posted December 3, 2009 | 12:42 PM (EST)


The Times business section leads with one of those stories that have been so often written about great media mergers: How did it happen, who whispered what to whom, who knew what when about the deal? In the past, these stories were breathless if not orgiastic. This one, about

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The President's War Is to Save His Own Skin

6 Comments | Posted December 2, 2009 | 12:13 PM (EST)


It is neither unreasonable nor dishonorable to be as cynical as possible when evaluating the official rationale for going to war--or continuing one.

President Obama, plausibly, believes very little of what he said last night about why we should continue to be in Afghanistan--that we could successful prosecute it,...

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Old Newsmen Never Die...And the White House Party Crashers Weren't Working Alone

Posted December 1, 2009 | 12:11 PM (EST)


There is a club in the West 40s in Manhattan which includes among its members many old newsmen who, curiously, have sworn, on pain of expulsion, never to utter its name in the press--a quaintness by which I will abide.

I had lunch yesterday, in the members' dining room, with...

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Should Google Worry?

Posted November 30, 2009 | 01:33 PM (EST)


Google is under media attack.

Rupert Murdoch is the most outspoken anti-Googlist, but his fulminations are now followed by a new book, Googled: The End of the World As We Know It, by the New Yorker's media writer, Ken Auletta--the closest thing the media world has to a court biographer--which...

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Murdoch and Microsoft: The Mice Are Trying to Roar

1 Comments | Posted November 24, 2009 | 12:31 PM (EST)


Microsoft is a company that Rupert Murdoch understands. When he talks about the technology business or about the Internet or Google, which, on at least one occasion, I've heard him call Gadget, he invariably reverts to talking about Microsoft, which, on at least one occasion, I've heard him call IBM....

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Books Are Bad for You

1 Comments | Posted November 23, 2009 | 01:08 PM (EST)


A few years ago, writing about the book business and how dumbed down and craven books had become--and pathetic, designed only to sell and then not selling--I wrote the line "books suck," subjecting me to much middlebrow opprobrium.

I'd like to revise that line: Books are evil.

They're pernicious....

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The Health-Care Wars Have Just Begun

Posted November 20, 2009 | 12:42 PM (EST)


My 84-year-old mother was full of venomous indignation at dinner last night over the great mammogram take-back. Bureaucrats, in her view, will happily kill women to save money. My colleague, Caroline Miller, Newser's editor in chief, took umbrage in this space the other day about the new guidelines....

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Sarah Palin Deserves Some More Attention

2 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 01:47 PM (EST)


This is a phenomenon that just keeps giving.

Its very lack of explanation, and ensuing incredulity and apoplexy, propel it.

There may not have ever been anything like it in modern American politics. Well, Ronald Reagan perhaps. But his was, at least, a 20-year phenomenon. In little more than a...

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China and the Obese: The President Meets His Greatest Problems

Posted November 18, 2009 | 01:48 PM (EST)


For all sorts of obvious reasons, it seems like a greatly unacceptable and possibly discriminatory thing to say that the obese are a lot like the Chinese (though it's unclear which group, if either, is being slurred). But hear me out.

It is simple math. In eight years, according to...

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