Julie Bloom
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Editor of the Live Team at The New York Times
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Articles by Julie Bloom
The New York Times announces new role for Max Bearak
For more than a dozen years, Max Bearak has reported from more than 50 countries on every continent except Antarctica. Now we are lucky and thrilled to announce that for his next assignment, he will bring his breadth of knowledge, deep empathy for his subjects and innate curiosity to his most wide-ranging beat yet as a correspondent on the Live team based in New York. Max joined The Times in 2022 as a climate reporter covering energy politics around the globe.
The New York Times: New leader for Seoul’s Breaking News Hub - Editor and Publisher
Posted Friday, January 16, 2026 10:33 am Breaking news, like hockey, demands a blend of speed and skill, and Mike Ives, who regularly takes to the ice in his off hours, will bring that expertise and more to his next role. He will be the deputy editor leading the Breaking News Hub in Seoul, which tackles some of our biggest live and breaking stories.
Carmen de Lavallade, groundbreaking dancer and choreographer, dies at 94
Carmen de Lavallade, a dancer who defied boundaries of race and age and touched almost every realm of the performing arts in a career of more than six decades, died Monday in Englewood, New Jersey. She was 94. Her death, in a hospital after a short illness, was confirmed by her son, Léo Holder.
Carmen de Lavallade, Dancer Whose Career Spanned the Arts, Dies at 94
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. Carmen de Lavallade in 2018. She continued to dance well into her 80s, long past the time most performers have retired.Credit...Andrew White for The New York Times Supported by SKIP ADVERTISEMENT Listen to this article · 7:06 min Learn more Dec.
Carmen de Lavallade, Dancer Whose Career Spanned the Arts, Dies at 94
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The New York Times announces updates on the London Breaking News Hub - Editor and Publisher
Posted Wednesday, July 2, 2025 1:47 pm Joel Petterson has been named the hub’s lead editor for Express, making him the point person for driving Express stories in London hours. Since joining the desk in 2023, Joel has demonstrated excellent news judgment, a keen eye for trending topics, deft editing skills and a much prized sense of humor.
Have a website account?Log In orRegister for exclusive website content. Home / Vol 14, No 3 (June 30, 2025) / The effects of radiation therapy on the brain: implications for management PDF 131 views Full Text 10 views Peer Review File 14 views COI Form 11 views
Time to evolve? Modernizing the hospital ethics committee
PERSPECTIVES IN HOSPITAL MEDICINE Time to evolve? Modernizing the hospital ethics committee Julie R. Bloom MD, Corresponding Author Julie R. Bloom MD Department of Radiation Oncology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA Correspondence Julie R. Bloom, MD, Department of Radiation Oncology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 1184 5th Ave, New York, NY 10029, USA.
The New York Times hires new reporter on Seoul’s breaking news hub - Editor and Publisher
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We are pleased to announce that Francesca Regalado is joining the breaking news hub in Seoul as a reporter. In her new role, Francesca will report on big breaking news and high interest-stories from around the world for the hub, a joint venture of the Express and Live teams. She will also help us stay on top of news while the U.S. sleeps.
By Julie Bloom Verified, Melissa Hoppert Verified, Andres Martinez Verified, Andrés Martínez Verified
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Editor & Publisher
Verified
New role for Andy Das at The New York Times - Editor and Publisher
Posted Wednesday, October 23, 2024 11:08 am I am excited to announce that Andy Das has been named a deputy editor on the Live team in New York, where he will play a crucial role in shaping the live report on the biggest storylines and managing the team across multiple time zones. Andy is a versatile, unflappable editor who has deftly handled stories of all shapes and sizes in his nearly 20 years at The Times.
The New York Times announces Breaking News Hub for London, names deputy editor - Editor and Publisher
The New York Times’s London newsroom plays a critical role in our around-the-clock news operation, and Express and Live are at the center of the action. The London Express team has helped lead the way in covering a litany of major storms and a global tech meltdown while delivering the delightful, viral stories that are its hallmark.
The New York Times announces new editor for Seoul breaking news hub - Editor and Publisher
We are excited to announce that Qasim Nauman will be joining the breaking news hub in Seoul as an assistant editor in July. Qasim is a perfect addition to the hub, a joint venture of Express and Live that jumps on big breaking news and high-interest stories from around the world, acting as an early warning system and force multiplier for all the desks in the newsroom. And his experience across Asia will help as the team works closely with International to expand our coverage in the region.
Risk-Tailoring Radiotherapy for Endometrial Cancer: A Narrative Review
All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. No special permission is required to reuse all or part of the article published by MDPI, including figures and tables. For articles published under an open access Creative Common CC BY license, any part of the article may be reused without permission provided that the original article is clearly cited. For more information, please refer to https://www.mdpi.com/openaccess.
Gender representation among academic US radiation oncology department chairs: who are they?
Abstract Women are underrepresented in academic radiation oncology (RO), particularly in leadership positions. In this study, we sought to better understand the characteristics of individuals who currently serve as academic RO chairpersons at institutions with an associated ACGME-accredited RO residency training program.
Head and Neck Cancer Patient Population, Management, and Oncologic Outcomes from the COVID-19 Pandemic
All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. No special permission is required to reuse all or part of the article published by MDPI, including figures and tables. For articles published under an open access Creative Common CC BY license, any part of the article may be reused without permission provided that the original article is clearly cited. For more information, please refer to https://www.mdpi.com/openaccess.
The New York Times: New role for Maggie Adams - Editor and Publisher
We are delighted to announce that Maggie Adams will be our next strategy and operations deputy, reporting jointly to the editors of Express and Live. She will join the leadership guiding our global teams as they pursue their distinct but related missions around breaking news.
The New York Times: Andrés R. Martínez to be deputy editor for Live and Express - Editor and Publisher
Posted Wednesday, December 6, 2023 12:30 pm We are thrilled to announce that Andrés R. Martínez has been promoted to deputy editor of a new breaking news hub in Seoul. In this new dual role, he will report jointly to the editors of Live and Express and supervise our teams in Asia.
The incorporation of cognitive-sparing techniques into prophylactic cranial irradiation in the management of small cell lung cancer
Have a website account?Log In orRegister for exclusive website content. Home / Vol 12, No 4 (August 31, 2023) / The incorporation of cognitive-sparing techniques into prophylactic cranial irradiation in the management of small... PDF 179 views Full Text 3 views Peer Review File COI Form
Combining Radiotherapy and Immunotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer
4. Discussion The use of both radiotherapy and immunotherapy has shown great promise as a treatment strategy for patients with LA and recurrent/metastatic HNSCC. Several studies have explored the combined synergistic and therapeutic effects of these treatments, providing various mechanistic rationales for their effectiveness. Based on several phase II/III clinical trials, it appears that adding immunotherapy to radiation is a safe option.
The Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Patients with Cancer in the United States: A Review
1. Introduction The passage of The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2010 heralded a substantial shift in U.S. healthcare policy. The ACA’s primary aim was to expand access to affordable and comprehensive healthcare coverage to millions of uninsured Americans, a goal partially realized through the expansion of state Medicaid programs.
How Did ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Get Those Dogfight Scenes? Joseph Kosinski Explains.
Movies|How Did ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Get Those Dogfight Scenes? Joseph Kosinski Explains. https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/30/movies/top-gun-maverick-joseph-kosinski.html Summer Hitmakers The director behind the biggest movie of 2022 so far discusses trying to make a movie that can’t be traced to any particular year and the meaning of Dad Cinema. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share.
Environmentally Sustainable Radiation Oncology: Can We Turn the Tides?
It is irrefutable that our planet and human health are increasingly impacted by a changing climate.
Postcards From the Biennale
Reporter’s Notebook His paintings travel, but Ha Chong-hyun stays in Korea; Anselm Kiefer melds art and sculpture at the Doges Palace.
Maggie Gyllenhaal Has Dangerous Ideas About Directing
Maggie Gyllenhaal has never shied away from difficult roles. The actress has been pushing boundaries for years with performances of complicated characters like an assistant playing sadomasochistic games with her boss (“Secretary”), the daughter of an arms dealer caught up in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (“The Honorable Woman”) and a sex worker in 1970s New York (“The Deuce”).
Green-ifying Clinical Trials
Resident Voice Editorial By Rachel Shenker, MD, Julie Bloom, MD, Katie Lichter, MD, MPH In oncology, clinical trials are of utmost importance to advance treatment options and management of cancer care. However, there is growing awareness concerning the environmental impact of health care practices. This has led to urgent demands for action.
When David Byrne Got Together With Spike Lee
The creative forces behind the new movie “American Utopia” were in search of a sense of connection and community even before the pandemic. They’re all in this together: David Byrne surrounded by, clockwise from top left, the musicians and vocalists Bobby Wooten III and Angie Swan, and the dancers and vocalists Chris Giarmo and Tendayi Kuumba in “American Utopia.” Oct. 16, 2020 A packed theater. A booming band. Dancers pounding across the stage in unison. And in the middle of it all: David Byrne.
Dev Patel Was Not a Dickens Fan. (Don’t Tell Armando Iannucci.)
“Whether I turn out to be the hero of my own story or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show.” They are some of the most famous words in all of English literature, and a riff on them also opens “The Personal History of David Copperfield.” The newest film by Armando Iannucci, the director behind the 2017 satire “The Death of Stalin” and the creator of similarly scathing television shows like “Veep,” takes a different approach to the Dickens classic.
Jackie Chan Says Chinese Need Control
Arts, Briefly April 19, 2009 It’s not unusual for actors to stumble when they talk about politics, but Jackie Chan, below, has struck a nerve on a particularly divisive issue. In the southern Chinese province of Hainan on Saturday Mr. Chan, the action star, told a group of business leaders, “I’m not sure if it’s good to have freedom or not,” The Associated Press reported. He also said: “I’m gradually beginning to feel that we Chinese need to be controlled.
Russian Dancer Signs With American Ballet Theater
Andrea Mohin/The New York TimesPolina Semionova of American Ballet Theater performing in “Giselle.” A Russian ballerina has decided to make America her artistic home. Polina Semionova, currently a guest artist with American Ballet Theater, will join the company as a principal dancer in September, Kevin McKenzie, Ballet Theater’s artistic director, announced.
D.I.Y. Music Videos, Inspired by the Pros
Lady Gaga, left, and Beyoncé in “Telephone”. April 30, 2010 A VIDEO that involves Lady Gaga and Beyoncé is bound to draw a lot of eyeballs, and sure enough, this particular YouTube sensation has been viewed more than 800,000 times.
Stalkers, Chat Bots and Trolls: Stories From Our Lives Online
Fiction Mary South couldn’t have predicted our current moment, but her stories could not feel timelier. March 10, 2020, 5:00 a.m. ET YOU WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN Stories By Mary South A virus snaking across the globe, headlines and viral tweets spreading conspiracy theories and panic, warnings not to touch one another or gather in person: Mary South couldn’t have predicted our current moment, but her stories could not feel timelier.
Lashes, Lashes, Lashes: What It Took to Give the ‘Bombshell’ Women the Fox Look
The makeup artists behind the film used prosthetics, base color, eyeliner, pounds of lash glue and lots of lip gloss to get the Fox look. Published Dec. 25, 2019Updated Dec. 26, 2019 They were Roger’s angels. Megyn Kelly, Gretchen Carlson and the other women at Fox all had a specific look that was intended to please him.
Zawe Ashton: On Broadway and Off Broadway, All at Once
For the last five weeks, the British actress and playwright Zawe Ashton has been zipping back and forth between West 45th Street and Lower Manhattan. She has gone from speaking the words of her character Emma in an acclaimed Broadway revival of Harold Pinter’s “Betrayal” to watching her own words brought to life by a cast of others in her play “for all the women who thought they were Mad” at Soho Rep.
Tarantino’s Los Angeles in Six Key Locations
The director’s canny settings reflect his deep understanding of the region as both sun-filled and sketchy, glamorous and anonymous. Pam Grier as a down-on-her-luck flight attendant in Los Angeles in “Jackie Brown.” Aug. 13, 2019 Whether he’s speeding down Cielo Drive, skipping across lanes on the 101, or rambling along Hollywood Boulevard in a sun-kissed haze, Brad Pitt’s irresistible, gold aviator-glasses-wearing stuntman serves many roles in “Once Upon a Time ...
The #MeToo Horror of ‘The Perfection’
The creators of the bonkers Netflix movie about female cellists and their male teacher explain their thought process: each plot twist was a feminist statement. Image Logan Browning, left, and Allison Williams in the movie’s China chapter.
Making Room on the Big Screen for a Woman Over 50
Image Julianne Moore in “Gloria Bell,” the rare film to examine the life of a woman navigating the day-to-day dramas of middle age. March 6, 2019 Can a divorced, 50-something woman with a penchant for wrap dresses and bad decisions be the center of her own story? The question sounds absurd, until you consider just how few films have focused on such a character. But that’s just what Sebastián Lelio’s slice-of-life “Gloria Bell” does.
Seven Eras of Willem de Kooning
“De Kooning: A Retrospective,” a new exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, includes some 200 paintings, drawings and sculptures created by Willem de Kooning, who helped define the shape of postwar American art.
Hurricanes. Shootings. Fires. Time for an Editor’s Emergency Kit.
Tech We’re Using When news of natural disasters or man-made ones break in the U.S., Julie Bloom taps a variety of tools to communicate with reporters, edit stories and get them published. Image Julie Bloom, a deputy editor on the national desk, communicates with her reporters in multiple ways: via text message, Slack, the Signal app, Gchat and phone calls. Jan. 2, 2019 How do New York Times journalists use technology in their jobs and in their personal lives?
Lin-Manuel Miranda on ‘Mary Poppins Returns’ and Movie Musicals
An infant floating down the Colorado River in a basket. This scene from the 1964 movie musical “The Unsinkable Molly Brown” is seared into the memory of Lin-Manuel Miranda. “It’s my dad’s favorite movie of all time and it was required viewing growing up,” Mr. Miranda recalled recently. That movie and a slew of other screen musicals were in regular rotation throughout Mr. Miranda’s childhood in Inwood in Upper Manhattan.
‘Suspiria’ Then and Now: Finding Darkness in an All-Female World
When Dario Argento’s German-set horror movie “Suspiria” came out in 1977, Berlin was on edge. Demonstrators angry at the West German government and what were seen as the depredations of capitalism hit the streets. The far-left guerrilla group the Red Army Faction terrorized the city in what would become known as the German Autumn, leaving several dead. It was also a key period for the assertion of feminist power and female liberation.
Millepied Retires From City Ballet
Benjamin Millepied, a principal dancer with New York City Ballet, has retired and plans to focus on his choreography, the company announced on Wednesday. Mr. Millepied, 34, originally from Bordeaux, France, and known to many non-balletomanes as the choreographer for the Oscar-nominated movie “Black Swan,” joined the company in 1995 after training at City Ballet’s affiliated School of American Ballet.
Sangre, esfuerzo, lágrimas y sudor: cómo Gary Oldman interpretó a Churchill
Read in English Luchó con distinción y estuvo en prácticamente todos los puestos relevantes del gobierno británico. Dirigió la nación durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial y se le atribuye la invención de la red de seguridad social. Se le ha llamado imperialista y beligerante; ebrio y racista. Ganó el Premio Nobel de Literatura y su producción literaria es comparable, en cantidad y tiempo entre obras, solo con la de Shakespeare. Pintó más de quinientas obras a lo largo de su vida.
Those Undulating Swan Arms? Not So Easy to Do
When Ms. Portman, 29, took the part, she said, “I really thought I was better than I was.” She wasn’t completely new to ballet, having studied as a child, but at 13 she had traded in her slippers to act. “It was a rude awakening to get there, and to be, like, I don’t know what I’m doing,” Ms. Portman said by phone, “If I had known how not close to ready I was, I never would have tried it.
Dance Comes to MoMA
The Whitney isn’t the only museum to involve dance artists in its programming. The Museum of Modern Art has commissioned the artist and choreographer Ralph Lemon to create a three-week program of dance performances entitled “Some Sweet Day” to be presented in the Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium Oct. 15 to Nov. 4.
Ellen Page and Emma Portner, in Motion
But if both women are eclectic in their approaches, they are also disciplined in their practices. On most days, Page rises early, at 6 a.m., while Portner gets up later. After spending time at her small black box of a studio in Melrose Hill, Portner often brings home footage from her rehearsals. Although her videos feel off the cuff, some of them take hours of sketching, staging and editing.
A New Ballet From Twyla Tharp
Twyla Tharp turns 70 this summer, but the choreographer isn’t slowing down any time soon. Atlanta Ballet and the Royal Winnipeg Ballet have announced that Ms. Tharp will collaborate with the two companies on a new evening-length ballet for next season. The work, which will be based on the writings of the Scottish author George MacDonald, will feature music based on Schubert and arranged by Richard Burke.
Blood, Sweat, Toil and Tears: Playing Churchill on Screen
The movie also tries to understand Churchill through his use of language, with the sound of typewriters constantly clacking in the background. “They are the most iconic speeches in the history of the English language and they were all written in 28 days, so how these speeches came to be and how he came to express the will and the sentiment of the nation is really the subject,” Mr. Wright added.
Women Are Sowing Wild Oats in New Buddy Comedies
“It’s not so much, ‘I’m a woman, I know better,’” she said. “It’s more ‘I’m a woman and I’ve had these experiences so I know other women will relate to this as well.’” She added that when a woman is writing the script or directing, there’s more opportunity to really push because women trust her and she often provides a level of comfort. Also they know women aren’t always delicate and can be the protagonist of a raunchy comedy just like a man. Kate McKinnon agrees.
Build a Pop Song
Justin Bieber, Jennifer Lopez, Rihanna: they all look to Kuk Harrell to perfect the voices that have made them superstars. Mr. Harrell is the most prominent vocal producer in the music industry, helping his clients sound their best through a combination of coaching and technology.
Women Who Have the Chops (and the Punches and the Kicks)
Speeding car chases, heart-stopping hand-to-hand combat, bodies left for dead on the pavement, a backdrop of international espionage. The director David Leitch’s latest film has all the elements of a Jason Bourne or James Bond blockbuster — except for one major difference. It’s a woman throwing the punches. In “Atomic Blonde,” Charlize Theron takes on the biggest action role for a woman on screen to date.
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