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NewsweekNE

News Editor

Newsweek is an American weekly news magazine and global digital news organization founded in 1933, providing news, analysis, and opinion on international issues, politics, business, technology, culture, and more. It reaches 100 million people monthly across print and digital platforms.

Newsweek

Employee count: 201-500

Salary: 90k-100k USD

United States only

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Newsweek is the global media organization that has earned audience time and trust for more than 90 years. Newsweek reaches 100 million people each month with thought-provoking news, opinion, images, graphics, and video delivered across a dozen print and digital platforms. Headquartered in New York City, Newsweek also publishes international editions in EMEA and Asia.

News Editor, Newsweek.com

Location: United States (Remote or Hybrid in NYC)

Position Overview:
The Senior Editor is a senior operational authority in Newsweek’s U.S. newsroom, responsible for setting the editorial bar and enforcing it relentlessly. This role demands editors who can run a national news desk at full throttle—making high-stakes editorial decisions in real time, rewriting aggressively, and delivering journalism that competes head-to-head with the strongest U.S. newsrooms. Reporting to the US News Director, the Senior Editor owns daily execution of the U.S. news report, turning strategy into journalism that is fast, authoritative, analytically sharp, and unmistakably worth a reader’s time. This is a role for editors who expect to touch the most important stories themselves, not manage them from a distance.

This is a full-time position working 3:00 pm-12:00 am ET five days a week, including one weekend shift. This position may be worked remotely anywhere in the United States.

Key Responsibilities:

Desk Command & Editorial Judgment

  • Run the U.S. news desk during peak coverage hours, making final calls on framing, prioritization, and play.
  • Distinguish decisively between stories that advance public understanding and those that merely follow the pack.
  • Kill weak or redundant stories quickly—and demand better replacements.

Elite Editing & Rewrite Authority

  • Deliver first-class framing on the most competitive national stories, identifying where Newsweek can add clarity, originality, or analytical value.
  • Rewrite without hesitation: leads, nut grafs, headlines, structure, sourcing, and tone.
  • Take raw field notes, transcripts, interviews, and exclusives and turn them into clean, analytical, tightly argued journalism.
  • Perform rapid second-day and rolling rewrites that materially improve stories as facts evolve.

Breaking News & Hands-On Reporting

  • Operate as a desk reporter when the moment demands it—making calls, confirming facts, chasing documents, and closing gaps.
  • Personally intervene on high-stakes or sensitive stories where precision and judgment are critical.

Standards, Culture & Accountability

  • Hold yourself and your team to elite newsroom standards.
  • Provide blunt, constructive feedback and demand improvement.
  • Mentor reporters and junior editors into sharper thinkers and stronger journalists.
  • Take ownership when coverage underperforms.

Audience & Competitive Awareness

  • Maintain a sophisticated understanding of how serious readers engage with news.
  • Work with audience teams to ensure performance goals support editorial ambition.
  • Monitor competitive coverage and push Newsweek to outperform, not echo.

Qualifications & Requirements:

  • 7–10+ years of experience at a high-level U.S. digital newsroom.
  • Demonstrated record editing breaking news, exclusives, and enterprise reporting at speed.
  • Exceptional news judgment.
  • First-rate rewriting skills.
  • Comfortable making consequential editorial decisions independently.
  • Proven ability to handle sensitive and legally complex stories.
  • Deep understanding of U.S. political, legal, and cultural dynamics.
  • Calm, decisive leadership style under pressure.

Salary Range: $90,000 - $100,000 commensurate with experience.

Newsweek is an equal opportunity employer. We seek employees of diverse backgrounds and are committed to providing an inclusive, equitable and respectful workplace.

About the job

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Posted on

Job type

Full Time

Experience level

Salary

Salary: 90k-100k USD

Experience

7 years minimum

Location requirements

Hiring timezones

United States +/- 0 hours

About Newsweek

Learn more about Newsweek and their company culture.

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Newsweek's story began in 1933, launched by Thomas J.C. Martyn, a former foreign-news editor at Time magazine. Initially named 'News-Week', it adopted the general format of its contemporary, Time, offering a weekly survey of news complemented by signed columns of analysis. A significant merger occurred in 1937 with Raymond Moley's 'Today' magazine, at which point the hyphen was dropped, and the publication became 'Newsweek'. This early iteration quickly established itself, bringing current events to life for an American audience through compelling photography and insightful commentary. Over the decades, Newsweek grew in stature and influence, eventually becoming recognized as one of the 'big three' American newsweeklies alongside Time and U.S. News & World Report.

A pivotal moment in Newsweek's journey was its acquisition in 1961 by The Washington Post Company under publisher Philip L. Graham. This ownership period saw Newsweek adopt a more politically liberal viewpoint and broaden its scope to include more extensive coverage of popular culture, employing a narrative style that resonated with a wide readership. The magazine flourished, achieving an international circulation of over four million at its peak and publishing multiple English-language international editions as well as local-language versions in countries like Japan, Korea, and Spain. However, the changing media landscape of the 21st century brought financial challenges. In 2010, The Washington Post Company sold Newsweek to American businessman Sidney Harman. Shortly thereafter, in early 2011, Newsweek merged with The Daily Beast, a news and commentary website, forming The Newsweek/Daily Beast Company. Despite these efforts, financial difficulties persisted, leading to the temporary cessation of its print edition at the end of 2012 as the focus shifted to an all-digital format. In 2013, IBT Media acquired Newsweek, and the print edition was relaunched in March 2014. The company underwent further restructuring, and in 2018, Newsweek became an independent entity, Newsweek Publishing LLC, co-owned by Dev Pragad, who also serves as President and CEO, and Johnathan Davis. Under Pragad's leadership, Newsweek has experienced a significant digital transformation and resurgence, now reaching 100 million readers per month.

Employee benefits

Learn about the employee benefits and perks provided at Newsweek.

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401k Matching

401k matching is available.

Healthcare

Healthcare benefits are available.

Flex Time

Flexible time options are available.

Vacation Allowance

Median of 3 weeks of vacation allowance.

View Newsweek's employee benefits
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Newsweek

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