Peter W. Kaplan
American newspaper editor

Peter W. Kaplan

The basics
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American newspaper editor
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
10 February 1954(South Orange)
Death:
29 November 2013(Manhattan)
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Biography

Introduction

Peter Wennik Kaplan (February 10, 1954 – November 29, 2013) was an American editor known for modernizing New Journalism for the digital age. He was the Editor-In-Chief of The New York Observer, a weekly newspaper, for 15 years. The Kingdom of New York, an anthology of articles from the famously pink paper, was co-edited by Kaplan.
In 2010, he worked as the editorial director of Fairchild Publications' Fairchild Fashion Group, where he helped oversee the relaunch of M, a men's magazine, and oversaw Women's Wear Daily, Footwear News, Menswear, the newly formed Fairchild books division, and other ventures.

Media appearances

On November 6, 2009, Kaplan appeared on The Charlie Rose Show, where he discussed the future of newspapers with regards to the Internet and mobile devices such as the Amazon Kindle, and Apple's iPad.

Two former editors from The New York Observer, Peter Stevenson and Jim Windolf, turned Kaplan into a Twitter character with two personalities, "Wise Kaplan" and "Cranky Kaplan," followed by insiders in the New York journalism community.

Early life and education

Kaplan was born in South Orange, New Jersey. His mother was a psychotherapist and his father was the owner and president of clothing manufacturer Complex Industries Corp.While at Columbia High School he joined the newspaper, The Columbian. He had two brothers, the writer James Kaplan and Rob Kaplan, an entertainment executive and business owner. He went on to obtain his degree from Harvard University in 1976. His college roommate was Robert Kennedy, Jr., son of late Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.

Career

Kaplan with Jared Kushner, owner of The New York Observer"

Kaplan's early career started at The New York Times, Esquire and Manhattan, inc. magazine where he served under both Jane Amsterdam and editor, Clay Felker.

In the early nineties he served as an Editorial Director at Conde Nast Traveler and a producer at The Charlie Rose Show. He then served as Editor-in-Chief of The New York Observer, from 1994 to 2009.

At The Observer, Kaplan worked with the following writers:

  • Gossip columnist Frank DiGiacomo
  • New York Times editor Alexandra Jacobs
  • New Yorker staff writer Nick Paumgarten
  • Choire Sicha, the founder of The Awl
  • Candace Bushnell—whose column "Sex and the City," which Kaplan named himself, became a pop culture sensation even as the paper that printed it remained relatively obscure.
  • Gabriel Sherman, the media reporter who chronicled Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes' affect on presidential politics in his book, "The Loudest Voice in the Room." Sherman is now national affairs editor at New York magazine.

Personal

His parents were both from New York City and he was one of three boys. He died of cancer in New York City on November 29, 2013, according to his wife, Lisa Chase, an editor at Elle. The couple had a son named Davey. His first marriage was to Audrey Walker; they had three children: Caroline, Charlie and Peter Kaplan.