Jill Abramson has a lot in common with today’s college grads: She’s out of a job, and doesn’t know when she’ll get a new one.
The recently fired executive editor of The New York Times delivered her first public remarks since her abrupt ouster on Monday morning when she delivered a keynote address, which focused on resiliency, to the graduating class of Wake Forest University.
“What’s next for me? I don’t know. So I’m in exactly the same boat as many of you,” Abramson joked at the North Carolina school.
The first female executive editor of the paper’s history added that losing a job she loves “hurts” but she’s excited for the next chapter in her life. Journalism, she said, would remain very much a part of her life.
To the surprise of many, Abramson, 60, was dismissed from the paper last Wednesday. Questions about her management style, compensation and whether or not she was treated differently because she was a woman were raised. Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the Times’ chairman said over the weekend that the firing was over her management style and not a result of gender discrimination. Managing editor Dean Baquet will replace Abramson and will be the newspaper’s first African-American executive editor.









