Janine Gibson (journalist)

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Janine Victoria Gibson is a British journalist who was appointed editor of the Weekend FT in 2023. Previously she was assistant editor of the Financial Times since May 2019.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Before then, in the summer of 2014, she became deputy editor of Guardian News and Media and editor-in-chief of theguardian.com website in London. She was the editor-in-chief in New York City of Guardian US, the offshoot of The Guardian that won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2014. After leaving The Guardian, Gibson was editor-in-chief of the BuzzFeed UK website until she stepped down in January 2019 as the publication announced financial difficulties.<ref name="Martinson">Jane Martinson, "Janine Gibson appointed editor-in-chief of BuzzFeed UK", The Guardian, 16 June 2015.</ref>

Early life

The daughter of British parents, Gibson was born in Germany. Her father, the industrialist Sir Ian Gibson,<ref>"Business profile: Gibson in the Mirror", Sunday Telegraph, 30 April 2006</ref> was then an employee of the motor-car manufacturer Ford of Europe, and her mother a teacher. Gibson read English Literature<ref>"Alumnae Profiles: Janine Gibson", Walthamstow Hall Senior School. Template:Webarchive.</ref> at St John's College, Oxford.<ref name="Pompeo">Joe Pompeo, "Editor Janine Gibsnon Banks on The Guardian's Distinctly British Appeal to the Internationalist' Yank", Capital New York, 13 October 2011.</ref>

Career

Gibson began her career in the media trade press, becoming deputy editor of Televisual (1995–97) and subsequently international editor of Broadcast magazine during 1997 to 1998.<ref name="Debrett's">"Ms Janine Gibson Authorised Biography", Debrett's. Template:Webarchive.</ref> She then briefly joined The Independent newspaper as a media correspondent for a few months, before taking up a similar post later in 1998 at The Guardian.<ref>"Executive Profile: Janine Gibson"Template:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore, Bloomberg Businessweek</ref>

The Guardian

At The Guardian, Gibson was responsible for launching The GuardianTemplate:'s media website<ref>"Janine Gibson Profile", theguardian.com [19 December 2000].</ref> and became Media Guardian editor. In May 2003, it was announced that she in addition had been appointed editor of the Media, Society, Education and Technology G3 supplements, a newly created post.<ref>Joe Lepper, "Guardian makes a number of senior editorial changes", PR Week, 2 May 2003.</ref>

Her appointment as editor of the guardian.co.uk website was announced in November 2008.<ref name="PG0611">"Janine Gibson is made editor of Guardian.co.uk", Press Gazette, 6 November 2008. Template:Webarchive.</ref> Her immediate superiors at this time were Emily Bell, then director of digital content, and Guardian editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger.<ref name="PG0611"/> After Bell took up an academic post in New York in April 2010, Gibson's responsibilities were expanded to include supervising all of Guardian News & Media's digital output.<ref>Jason Deans, "Emily Bell to leave Guardian News & Media for university post", theguardian.com, 21 April 2010.</ref>

GuardianTemplate:'s American website

After several months of discussion with Alan Rusbridger in early 2011, Gibson was formally appointed the editor of The GuardianTemplate:'s new American online operations, to be based in New York, in April. The newspaper's new US website was launched in September;<ref name="Pompeo"/> an earlier attempt by the newspaper to relate to an American online audience, headed by Michael Tomasky in Washington DC between 2007 and 2009, had proved unsuccessful.<ref name="Witt">Emily Witt, "The Guardian in America Is Going to Be British This Time", New York Observer, 27 June 2011.</ref>

Glenn Greenwald brought the leaked material from Edward Snowden to Gibson's attention, and she formed the team who met Snowden in Hong Kong to analyse the material he had accumulated.<ref>Nicky Woolf, "How The Guardian Broke the Snowden Story", The Atlantic, 5 July 2013.</ref>

Gibson continued to be Greenwald's supervising editor during the time he was associated with The Guardian and editing Guardian US's Pulitzer Prize winning<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> coverage of Snowdon's revelations about NSA surveillance.<ref>Ken Auletta, "Annals of Communication: Freedom of Information", New Yorker, 7 October 2013.</ref> She is reported to have told Alan Rusbridger when informing him of the scoops Greenwald, their newspaper's columnist, had uncovered: "I’ve got a little story to chat to you about".<ref>Christine Haughney and Noam Cohen, "Guardian Makes Waves, and Is Ready for More", The New York Times, 10 June 2013.</ref>

After returning to London, Gibson became chief of theguardian.com website during Summer 2014 becoming in addition a deputy editor of Guardian News & Media.<ref>"Guardian News & Media announces senior editorial changes", theguardian.com (press release), 6 March 2014</ref> Her place as head of The GuardianTemplate:'s American operations was taken by Katharine Viner.<ref>Ravi Somaiya, "Guardian to Make Management Changes", The New York Times, 6 March 2014.</ref>

Gibson was offered a managing editor of digital media position with The New York Times in early May 2014, but turned it down. According to one report in The New Yorker, internal politics related to her potential hiring led to the dismissal of that paper's executive editor, Jill Abramson a few weeks later.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Gibson was perceived to be the most likely successor to Alan Rusbridger, who resigned as editor-in-chief in December 2014, but Katharine Viner was ultimately appointed in March 2015.<ref>Harry Lambert, "Who will replace Alan Rusbridger at the Guardian?", New Statesman, 10 December 2014.</ref><ref>Henry Mance, "Katharine Viner appointed Guardian editor", Financial Times, 20 March 2015.</ref>

In May 2015, Gibson left The Guardian.<ref>Alex Spence, "Snowden editor to leave The Guardian", Politico, 22 May 2015.</ref>

BuzzFeed UK

In September 2015, prior to an expansion of its activities, she was appointed as editor-in-chief of the BuzzFeed UK website.<ref name="Martinson"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Under Gibson's editorship, the website moved into more hard news and published an investigative series<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> in which 14 suspicious UK deaths (and one in the US) were found to have links to the Kremlin. The series triggered Theresa May's government to commit to a full review, was a Pulitzer Prize finalist and George Clooney has picked it up for a film. In early 2018, the website also published a previously unseen Brexit analysis <ref>Template:Cite news</ref> which stated the UK would be worse off in every scenario.

BuzzFeed UK won News Website of the Year in 2017 at the Press Awards.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

FT Weekend won the London Press Club Newspaper of the Year in 2023 and the Newspaper Awards Weekend Newspaper of the Year.

References

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