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Amy Chozick
American political reporter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Amy Chozick (born 1979 or 1980[1]) is an American journalist, author, and screenwriter. She has worked as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, and is the author of Chasing Hillary, a memoir about covering Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign. Chozick adapted the book into the HBO Max series The Girls on the Bus. She has also written for publications such as Vanity Fair and Vogue.
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Early life and education
Chozick grew up in a Jewish family[2] in San Antonio, Texas, where she began working in journalism writing for the San Antonio Express-News as part of a program offering school credit for working off campus.[3] She attended Tom C. Clark High School,[1] then the University of Texas at Austin, where she was originally a journalism major, but switched to English and Latin American studies after three weeks.[3]
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Career
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Perspective
Chozick began her career at The Wall Street Journal, where she served as a foreign correspondent based in Tokyo and a political reporter covering the 2008 presidential campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.[4][5] After eight years at the Journal, she joined The New York Times in 2011, first reporting on corporate media before moving to the politics team in 2013.[5][6] At the Times, she became a national political reporter and was a lead correspondent covering Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign.[7][6]
In 2012, she accompanied President Bill Clinton on a philanthropic trip to Africa. [8] Chozick has also written for Vogue, including profiles of Stormy Daniels[9] and all of the women running for president in 2020.[10]
In 2015, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump referred to her as a "third-rate reporter".[11][12]
In 2016, she said that as a result of her reporting on Clinton, specifically on her clinching the Democratic nomination for president in June of that year, that she had received death threats from supporters of Clinton's rival in this campaign, Bernie Sanders.[13]
In 2018, Chozick published Chasing Hillary, a memoir about covering Clinton's campaigns. The book, which the Times called "The Devil Wears Prada meets The Boys on the Bus," became a bestseller. Chozick and Julie Plec adapted the book as a television series called The Girls on the Bus.[14][15][16]
In 2023, Chozick got an exclusive interview with Elizabeth Holmes for The New York Times shortly before Holmes began her prison sentence. The profile drew mixed responses from media commentators.[17][18][19]
In November 2024, it was announced that she will be writing a Netflix series that will star Meghann Fahy and will be produced by Chernin Entertainment.[20]
Chozick's debut novel will be released in July 2026. Chozick is adapting the novel into a movie with Fifth Season and producer Brad Weston.[21]
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Personal life
Chozick lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Robert Ennis, and their son, born in 2018.[1][22]
Works
Bibliography
- Chasing Hillary: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns, and One Intact Glass Ceiling, Harper, 2018, ISBN 978-0062413598
Filmography
- The Girls on the Bus
- MORE (pilot, HBO Max, Creator/Executive Producer)[23]
- House of Cards (Netflix, Consultant)
Select articles
- Los Angeles Is Being Crushed Under the Weight of Inaction, New York Times, January 13, 2025. Description: An opinion piece criticizing California's leadership for their lack of response to the fire
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References
External links
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