Slate
Slate
Online magazine | |
Owner | The Slate Group |
Created by | Michael Kinsley |
Editor | Jared Hohlt |
Website | , |
Alexarank | |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Optional for Slate Plus and commenting only (US readers) Metered paywall (non-US readers) |
Launched | 1996 |
Current status | Active |
ISSN | 1090-6584[35](print) 1091-2339[36](web) |
OCLCnumber | 728292344[37] |
It was created in 1996 by former New Republic editor Michael Kinsley, initially under the ownership of Microsoft as part of MSN. In 2004, it was purchased by The Washington Post Company (later renamed the Graham Holdings Company), and since 2008 has been managed by The Slate Group, an online publishing entity created by Graham Holdings. Slate is based in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C.[8]
Slate, which is updated throughout the day, covers politics, arts and culture, sports, and news. According to its former editor-in-chief Julia Turner, the magazine is "not fundamentally a breaking news source", but rather aimed at helping readers to "analyze and understand and interpret the world" with witty and entertaining writing.[9] As of mid-2015, it publishes about 1,500 stories per month.[10]
A French version, slate.fr, was launched in February 2009 by a group of four journalists, including Jean-Marie Colombani, Eric Leser, and economist Jacques Attali. Among them, the founders hold 50 percent in the publishing company, while The Slate Group holds 15 percent.[11][12] In 2011, slate.fr started a separate site covering African news, Slate Afrique, with a Paris-based editorial staff.[13]
It is ad-supported and has been available to read free of charge since 1999, but restricted access for non-US readers via a metered paywall in 2015.
Online magazine | |
Owner | The Slate Group |
Created by | Michael Kinsley |
Editor | Jared Hohlt |
Website | , |
Alexarank | |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Optional for Slate Plus and commenting only (US readers) Metered paywall (non-US readers) |
Launched | 1996 |
Current status | Active |
ISSN | 1090-6584[35](print) 1091-2339[36](web) |
OCLCnumber | 728292344[37] |
Background

The design of Slate's homepage from 2006 to 2013
Slate features regular and semi-regular columns such as Explainer, Moneybox, Spectator, Transport, and Dear Prudence. Many of the articles are short (less than 2,000 words) and argument-driven. Around 2010, the magazine also began running long-form journalism. Many of the longer stories are an outgrowth of the "Fresca Fellowships", so-called because former editor Plotz liked the soft drink Fresca. "The idea is that every writer and editor on staff has to spend a month or six weeks a year not doing their regular job, but instead working on a long, ambitious project of some sort," Plotz said in an interview.[14]
Slate introduced a paywall-based business model in 1998 that attracted up 20,000 subscribers but was later abandoned.[15] A similar subscription model was implemented in April 2001 by Slate's independently owned competitor, Salon.com.
Slate started a daily feature, "Today's Pictures", on November 30, 2005, which featured 15–20 photographs from the archive at Magnum Photos that share a common theme. The column also features two Flash animated "Interactive Essays" a month.
On its 10th anniversary, Slate unveiled a redesigned website. It introduced Slate V in 2007,[16] an online video magazine with content that relates to or expands upon their written articles. In 2013, the magazine was redesigned under the guidance of Design Director Vivian Selbo.
Slate was nominated for four digital National Magazine Awards in 2011 and won the NMA for General Excellence. In the same year, the magazine laid off several high-profile journalists, including co-founder Jack Shafer and Timothy Noah (author of the Chatterbox column).[17] At the time, it had around 40 full-time editorial staff.[17] The following year, a dedicated ad sales team was created.[18]
Slate launched the "Slate Book Review" in 2012, a monthly books section edited by Dan Kois.[19]
The next year, Slate became profitable after preceding years had seen layoffs and falling ad revenues.[9]
In 2014, Slate introduced a paywall system called "Slate Plus", offering ad-free podcasts and bonus materials. A year later, it had attracted 9,000 subscribers generating about $500,000 in annual revenue.[15]
Slate moved all content behind a metered paywall for international readers in June 2015, explaining "our U.S.-based sales team sells primarily to domestic advertisers, many of whom only want to reach a domestic audience....The end result is that, outside the United States, we are not covering our costs."[20] At the same time, it was stated that there were no plans for a domestic paywall.[10]
Slate's articles have presented news and opinions from a liberal perspective, eventually evolving into a self-proclaimed liberal news site.
Reputation for counterintuitive arguments ("Slate pitches")
Since 2006,[3] Slate has been known for publishing contrarian pieces arguing against commonly held views about a subject, giving rise to the #slatepitches Twitter hashtag in 2009.[4] The Columbia Journalism Review has defined Slate pitches as "an idea that sounds wrong or counterintuitive proposed as though it were the tightest logic ever," and in explaining its success wrote "Readers want to click on Slate Pitches because they want to know what a writer could possibly say that would support their logic".[21]
In 2014, Slate's then editor-in-chief Julia Turner acknowledged a reputation for counterintuitive arguments forms part of Slate's "distinctive" brand, but argued that the hashtag misrepresents the site's journalism. "We are not looking to argue that up is down and black is white for the sake of being contrarian against all logic or intellectual rigor. But journalism is more interesting when it surprises you either with the conclusions that it reaches or the ways that it reaches them."[9]
In a 2019 article for the site, Slate contributor Daniel Engber reflected on the changes that had occurred on the site since he started writing for it 15 years previously. He suggested that its original worldview, influenced by its founder Kinsley and described by Engber as "feisty, surprising, debate-club centrist-by-default" and "liberal contrarianism", had shifted towards "a more reliable, left-wing slant", whilst still giving space for heterodox opinions, albeit "tempered by other, graver duties". He argued that this was necessary within the context of a "Manichean age of flagrant cruelty and corruption", although he also acknowledged that it could be "a troubling limitation".[22]
Podcasts
According to NiemanLab, Slate has been involved in podcasts "almost from the very beginning" of the medium.[23] Its first podcast offering, released on July 15, 2005,[24] featured selected stories from the site read by Andy Bowers, who had joined Slate after leaving NPR in 2003.[23][25] By June 2012, Slate had expanded their lineup to 19 podcasts, with Political Gabfest and Culture Gabfest being the most popular.[23] This count had shrunk to 14 by February 2015, with all receiving six million downloads per month.[25] The podcasts are "a profitable part of [*Slate'*s] business"; the magazine charges more for advertising in its podcasts than in any of its other content.[23]
Amicus – legal commentary
Audio Book Club
Culture Gabfest
Daily Podcast – some of everything
The Waves (formerly DoubleX) – women's issues
Hang Up and Listen – sports
Hit Parade - pop music history
If Then - technology, Silicon Valley, and tech policy
Lexicon Valley – language issues
Manners for the Digital Age
Mom and Dad Are Fighting – parenting
Money - business and finance
Political Gabfest
Spoiler Specials – film discussion
Studio 360 - pop culture and the arts, in partnership with Public Radio International
The Gist
Thirst Aid Kit
Slow Burn
Video Podcast
Trumpcast
Slate podcasts have gotten longer over the years. The original Gabfest ran 15 minutes; by 2012, most ran about 45 minutes.[23]
Staff
Jared Hohlt became editor-in-chief on April 1, 2019.[26] Julia Turner replaced David Plotz in July 2014 and resigned in October 2018.[27] Plotz had been editor of Slate since 2008[28] and deputy editor to Jacob Weisberg, Slate's editor from 2002 until his designation as the chairman and editor-in-chief of The Slate Group. The Washington Post Company's John Alderman is Slate's publisher.
Key executives
Lowen Liu (Deputy Editor)
Josh Levin (Editorial Director)
Allison Benedikt (Executive Editor)
Laura Bennett (Features Director)
Forrest Wickman (Culture Editor)
Charlie Kammerer (Chief Revenue Officer)
Notable contributors and departments
Anne Applebaum (Foreigners)
John Dickerson (Politics)
Simon Doonan (Fashion)
Stefan Fatsis (Hang Up and Listen)
Daniel Gross (The Juice)
Fred Kaplan (War Stories)
Juliet Lapidos (Books / Explainer / Brow Beat)
Dahlia Lithwick (Jurisprudence)
Michael Moran (Reckoning / Foreign Policy)
Timothy Noah (The Customer)
Meghan O'Rourke (The Highbrow / Grieving)
Daniel Mallory Ortberg (Dear Prudence, since 2015[20])
Mike Pesca (The Gist)
Robert Pinsky (Poetry editor)
Phil Plait (Bad Astronomy / Science)
Ron Rosenbaum (Spectator)
William Saletan (Human Nature)
Jack Shafer (Press Box)
Eliot Spitzer (The Best Policy)
Mike Steinberger (Drink)
Dana Stevens (Surfergirl through 2005/Movies)
Seth Stevenson (Ad Report Card / Well-Traveled)
James Surowiecki (The Book Club)
Leon Neyfakh (Podcast)
Tom Vanderbilt (Transport)
Jacob Weisberg (The Big Idea)
Tim Wu (Technology/Jurisprudence)
Emily Yoffe (Dear Prudence - until 2015 -, Human Guinea-pig)[20]
Reihan Salam (Politics)
Laura Miller (Books and Culture)
Carl Wilson (Music)
Past contributors
Emily Bazelon
Ian Bremmer
Phil Carter
David Edelstein
Franklin Foer
Sasha Frere-Jones
Atul Gawande
Austan Goolsbee
Robert Lane Greene
Virginia Heffernan
David Helvarg
Christopher Hitchens
Mickey Kaus
Paul Krugman
Steven Landsburg
Will Leitch
Farhad Manjoo
David Plotz
Daniel Radosh
Bruce Reed
Jody Rosen
Herbert Stein
James Surowiecki
Julia Turner
Rob Walker
David Weigel
Robert Wright
Matthew Yglesias
Fareed Zakaria
Other recurring features
Assessment
Books
Dear Prudence (advice column)
Dispatches
Drink
Food
Foreigners
Gaming
Science Denial
Shopping
The Good Word (language)
The Movie Club
The TV Club
Blogs
Behold, *Slate'*s photo blog
Brow Beat, *Slate'*s culture blog
Crime, a crime blog
Future Tense, a technology blog produced as part of a partnership between Slate, the New America Foundation, and Arizona State University
Lexicon Valley, a blog about language
Moneybox, *Slate'*s business and economics blog
Outward, *Slate'*s LGBTQ blog
The Eye, a design blog
The Vault, *Slate'*s history blog
The World, a blog about foreign affairs
Wild Things, *Slate'*s animals blog
XX Factor, a blog about women's issues. In 2009, it gave rise to Double X, launched by The Slate Group as a separate online magazine about women's topics, edited by Hanna Rosin and Emily Bazelon, which was folded back into a Slate.com section after half a year.[30]
Summary columns
Slatest (news aggregator)