Susan Braudy was born on Susan Orr July 8,1941 and is an American author and journalist.
14 Facts About Susan Braudy
Susan Braudy received her undergraduate degree from Bryn Mawr College and attended University of Pennsylvania and Yale University graduate schools, where she studied ethics and aesthetics.
Susan Braudy was Vice President of the American Jewish Committee and his Master's thesis at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania became the book Technological Unemployment, an early look at how advances in technology were replacing human labor.
Susan Braudy was the principal of a vocational night school whose students were largely African-American.
Susan Braudy has written for The New York Times, Newsweek, The Atlantic Monthly, The Huffington Post, Harper's Magazine, Glamour, Vanity Fair, Ms.
Susan Braudy was the first woman writer hired by Newsweek.
Susan Braudy had been commissioned by Playboy magazine in 1969 to write an "objective" piece on the feminism movement.
Susan Braudy later wrote an article published in Defiance and Glamour magazine in which she analyzed the contents of Hefner's memo and criticized his approach to women.
Susan Braudy edited the October 1975 men's issue of Ms.
In 1977, Susan Braudy became an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press.
In 1981, Susan Braudy was appointed Vice President of East Coast Production at Warner Brothers.
Susan Braudy worked as Vice President of Michael Douglas's Stonebridge Production Company from 1986 to 1989.
Susan Braudy was hired by Francis Ford Coppola, Jerry Bruckheimer, Martin Scorsese, and Oliver Stone to write screenplays.
In 2006, Susan Braudy judged the Lukas Prize, the award from the Columbia University Journalism School and the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, given annually to recognize excellence in book-length investigative journalism.