Kara Swisher

Recent Posts by Kara Swisher

ATD Gets Social With Liz Gannes (In Other Words, We Hired Her)

A few days ago, All Things Digital announced CNET senior writer Ina Fried was joining the staff to cover mobile for the site.

Today, we complete a one-two punch with the hiring of Liz Gannes, who will be covering the critical social beat.

She comes to us after an impressive stint as a senior writer from the terrific GigaOm Network.

Anyone who follows the development of Web 2.0 and the growing power of social networking–from powerhouse Facebook to the innovative stylings of Twitter to the explosive growth of Zynga–understands the importance of the social arena to the future of the Web.

That was underscored today with the unveiling of a new $250 million sFund by Kleiner Perkins, Facebook, Amazon and others.

Liz will be covering all this and more for us, which we expect her to do with the same kind of professionalism and insight she displayed in spades at GigaOm.

Liz, interestingly enough, was raised in Silicon Valley, and has been wise beyond her years, even as a high school student.

In fact, in an article in the New York Times in 2000 about the corrosive effect of the Web 1.0 culture on young people in the area–called the “affluenza syndrome”–the then-senior at Palo Alto High School said:

“It’s hard to ground ourselves sometimes….The things we hear on the news are happening all around us. We’re living on top of this bubble and we’re not able to see below us.”

We think Liz’s unique perspective will allow readers to see a lot.

After high school and college at Dartmouth, where she got a degree in linguistics, the daughter of a tech-reporter-turned-start-up-CEO–the amazing Stuart Gannes–started her career as a reporter for Red Herring in 2004.

In 2006, Liz founded NewTeeVee, a GigaOM site that is now the pre-eminent source for news and analysis about the intersection of entertainment and technology.

We are thrilled to have her join ATD, especially so since she is coming from a site we admire so much and, more importantly, because of her work for tech’s top-notch blogging pioneer, Om Malik.

And we think once Liz starts chronicling the social arena for us, our readers will have even more to admire in her work.

There are more job announcements to come soon, as ATD expands our coverage, so stay tuned.


comments so far. Add yours.

  • http://www.jkontherun.com Anonymous

    Best of luck to Liz, who was always a pleasure to work with and read at GigaOM. Kara, you and Walt take care of our girl, OK? :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/LizGannes Liz Gannes

    Thanks Kevin! I learned from you how to reply to comments. :)

  • http://www.twitter.com/davidafenton DavidAFenton

    wow congrats. allthingsd looks like the new place to be.

  • http://www.latko.org clatko

    Congratulations, Liz. Been a fan of your writing for a while.

  • http://www.facebook.com/mbrown Mike Brown

    Liz Gannes is a serious journalist: she’s extremely thoughtful, she reports objectively and clearly and her stories are relevant. Liz will make an excellent addition to the ATD team. Congrats to Liz and ATD.

  • http://allthingsd.com/boomtown Kara Swisher

    Wait! We hired a LADY.

  • http://allthingsd.com/boomtown Kara Swisher

    Like a cool club? Uh oh.

  • http://allthingsd.com/boomtown Kara Swisher

    We heartily agree.

  • http://twitter.com/marshallk Marshall Kirkpatrick

    Incredible! Congrats to all involved.

  • Anonymous

    Great catch! Liz is a superstar who “gets it” – I’m sure she will be a great addition to AllThingsD.

  • Anonymous

    Thrilled for both you and Liz — couldn’t be a better match.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Frank-Guillen/100000687065036 Frank Guillen

    ATD is just getting better each day…. congrats…. Hey, if you keep stealing good writers elsewhere there will be a reboot, I read Ina at Cnet and I read GigaOm each day…. You are really planning something big….

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Twitter’s still in its honeymoon period, but that won’t last forever. At some point, it’s going to be less of a wunderkammer, and more of a regrettable necessity.

— Reuters finance blogger Felix Salmon, in an article entitled “Why Twitter will get more annoying”