|
|
|
BiographyHoward Rosenberg is the Pulitzer Prize-winning former television critic for the Los Angeles Times, where his provocative column was distributed nationally and widely read by decision makers in the media and entertainment industry for 25 years.
Witty, outspoken and known for his courageous views, Rosenberg was named the nations best TV critic in a survey of his colleagues conducted by Electronic Media and has won numerous awards for his print commentaries. Rosenberg has been interviewed on many major national news programs from ABCs Nightline to CNN to the BBC. He has been a sports media commentator on ESPN and was author of the nationally syndicated satirical cartoon strip, Airwaves. At the University of Southern California, Rosenberg teaches news ethics in the Annenberg School for Communication and critical writing and a TV symposium in the School of Cinematic Arts. An anthology of Rosenbergs columns and essays, Not So Prime Time: Chasing the Trivial on American Television, was published by Ivan R. Dee in Chicago. Publishers Weekly granted it a coveted starred review, anointing it a delectable book of crisp, witty and caustic criticism. Said Kirkus Reviews: Rosenberg is the real thinga serious thoughtful, lucent writer whose low-brow beat appears almost incongruous... No one has mapped TVs terrain more thoroughly and starkly. And Bill Moyers proclaimed: Read this and youll see why the Pulitzer jurors said Howard is the best. Rosenberg's latest non-fiction book,No Time to Think: The Menace of Media Speed and the 24-hour News Cycle, details the perils of new-age media. Co-written by Charles S. Feldman, it was published in October, 2008 by Continuum Publishing. Ray Bradbury said: "You need this book. Read it." Added Linda Ellerbee: "This is a dangerous book because it's all true." Relentlessly untrue is Rosenberg's new mystery novel Up Yours! which available on Amazon.com and Kindle. A native of Kansas City, Rosenberg earned a bachelors degree in history from the University of Oklahoma and a Masters degree in political science from the University of Minnesota. Ardent animal advocates, he and his wife, Carol, a passionate Getty Center docent, live in a suburb of Los Angeles with a cockatiel and two cats. A frequent visitor is their daughter, Kirsten, singer for The Iron Maidens, an all-girl heavy metal tribute band that tours globally. |
|
|