Michael Moss
Michael Moss is an American journalist, author, and
public speaker. He was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting in 2010, and was a finalist for the prize
in 2006 and
1999. He is also the recipient of the
Gerald Loeb Award for Large Newspapers, an
Overseas Press Club citation, and a
James Beard Foundation Award for Literary Writing. Before joining ''
The New York Times'', he was a reporter for ''
The Wall Street Journal'', ''
New York Newsday'', ''
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution'', ''
The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel'' and ''
High Country News''. His authorships include ''
Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us'' that was #1 on
''The New York Times'' Best Seller list and has been translated into 22 languages. His television appearances include on
CBS,
CNN,
NPR,
The Daily Show, and
Fox, and he has spoken at more than 60 companies, organizations, and schools including
Cornell University,
Yale University,
Columbia University,
Duke University,
Nestlé,
Bloomberg, the
World Health Organization, and the
Smithsonian Institution. He has been a fellow of
Columbia University's Gannett Center for Media Studies, a fellow of the
German Marshall Fund, and an adjunct professor at the
Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. He currently lives in
Brooklyn with his wife and two sons.
Provided by Wikipedia