Danyel Smith

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Danyel Smith
Born (1965-06-23) June 23, 1965 (age 58)
Oakland, California
Residence Brooklyn, New York
Nationality American
Ethnicity African American
Education Journalism
Alma mater University of California
Occupation Journalist, magazine editor
Years active 1989-present
Known for Celebrity interviews
Spouse(s) Elliott Wilson
Website danyelsmith.tumblr.com

Danyel Smith (born June 23, 1965) is an American magazine editor and journalist.[1] Danyel is a 2014 John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University.[2][3] She is also writing a history of African-American women in pop music.[4] Smith is also the former editor of Billboard[5] and the first African-American editor of the magazine. Also, she is the former chief content officer of Vibe Media Group and former editor-in-chief of Vibe and vibe.com.[6] She was the first African-American, and first female editor of Vibe. Among other outlets, Smith has written for Elle, Time, Cosmopolitan, Essence, The Village Voice, The New Yorker, CNN.com, Rolling Stone, Condé Nast Publications, Ebony and NPR.[7][8]

Early life and education

Danyel was born and raised in Oakland, California.[9] She graduated in 1983 from St. Mary’s Academy in Inglewood, California, and went on to attend the University of California, Berkeley. Her mother is of Filipino and African-American descent. She has one younger sister, Raquel. In addition, she has a younger stepsister, Nicole, and stepbrother Keith. Danyel currently lives in Brooklyn with her husband, Elliott Wilson. They were married in Los Angeles in June 2005.[10]

She was named in "10 Mentors to Follow on Twitter" by Her Agenda.[11] Soon to be featured in Spike Lee’s Bad 25 documentary (about Michael Jackson’s acclaimed 1987 album), Danyel has appeared as a featured commentator on The Biography Channel, VH1, ABC, BET, CNN, CTV, PBSCharlie Rose, CBS This Morning, Good Morning America, and NPR.[12][13][14][15][16][17]

Writing career

Danyel Smith started her career in 1989 as a freelance writer, columnist and critic in the California’s Bay Area at The San Francisco Bay Guardian[18] and The East Bay Express. From 1990 to 1991, she served as the music editor of San Francisco Weekly. By 1992, Smith was freelancing as a reporter for Spin magazine, where she wrote a pop culture/music column called "Dreaming America".[19] In 1993, Smith moved to New York to become Rhythm and blues editor for Billboard magazine. At that time, she was also reviewing live shows and recorded music for the New York Times.[20]

In 1994, she became music editor of what was then Quincy Jones’ new VIBE magazine. Two years later, Smith was awarded the National Arts Journalism Program fellowship at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. After her year in Evanston, Illinois, she was named editor-in-chief of Vibe in 1997.[21] She was responsible for all editorial content in the music magazine during its definitive era. Smith, in two years raised Vibe’s circulation from 500,000 to 750,000+ readers. In 1999, she resigned and joined Time Inc. as an editor-at-large. There she consulted and wrote for magazines including Time, Entertainment Weekly and In Style.

Smith left Time Inc. in 2001 to begin a five-year journey that included getting a Master of Fine Arts at the New School University, publishing two novels and teaching at the university level. Her first novel, More Like Wrestling (Crown, 2003), was hailed by the New York Times Book Review as "lyrical and original",[22] while The San Francisco Chronicle called it "beautiful, and in its way, miraculous".[23] Washington Post Book World said that Smith’s "prose sings with precision".[24] During this period, Smith worked as a workshop leader at the Radcliffe Publishing Course in Cambridge, Mass. She was on the adjunct faculty of the Writing Program at the New School University. And while working on her second novel, Bliss,[25] she was on the guest faculty at Saint Mary’s College of California. Smith was also a writer-in-residence at Skidmore College.

In 2006, Smith returned to run Vibe Magazine. This time, she was responsible for the digital as well as the paper platforms. Smith’s cover profile of Keyshia Cole was featured in Da Capo Press’s Best Music Writing 2008. After three years, Smith had a short stint at the Washington Post’s African-American political site, The Root, before returning to the music industry bible, Billboard, as editor. In 2012, she resigned and inked a deal to write a history of African-American women in pop music.[26] In 2015, HRDCVR[27] a hardcover culture magazine created by diverse teams for a diverse world founded by Danyel Smith and husband Elliott Wilson was released. In addition to HRDCVR, Smith and her husband began a podcast on iTunes called, Relationship Goals[28] in which they talk about pop culture, hip hop music and how they make their relationship work.

In 2016, Smith was named the culture editor[29] of ESPN's newest venture called, The Undefeated.

See also

References

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  2. http://knight.stanford.edu/
  3. http://knight.stanford.edu/fellows/class-of-2014/danyel-smith/
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External links