Journalist Ezra Klein, editor-at-large and co-founder of Vox media, will kick off the latest season of the student-sponsored Distinguished Lecture Series on Thursday, Oct. 10. The event will take place at the Jim and Joyce Faulkner Performing Arts Center. The lecture begins at 7 p.m. – doors will open at 6:30.
Klein is also a policy analyst for MSNBC where his commentary focuses on, as he describes it, “domestic and economic policy-making, as well as the political system that’s constantly screwing it up.”
“We are excited to kick off the latest season of Distinguished Lectures,” said Samia Ismail. “The committee members chose Ezra Klein, in part, because of his breadth and depth of knowledge on current issues important to college students.”
Klein hosts the Ezra Klein Show, a weekly podcast that gives listeners a chance to get inside the heads of the newsmakers and power players in politics and media. Klein brings far-reaching conversations about hard problems, big ideas, illuminating theories and cutting-edge research.
Past episodes of his show have covered topics such as how Mark Zuckerberg intends to govern Facebook, what Barack Obama regrets in Obamacare, the dangers Yuval Harari sees for the future, what Michael Pollan learned on psychedelics, lessons Bryan Stevenson learned freeing the wrongly convicted on death row and ways N.K. Jemisin imagines new worlds.
Prior to starting Vox, Klein oversaw The Washington Post’s “Wonkblog” and was a columnist for Bloomberg News. He has written for The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books, and he has appeared on Face the Nation, Real Time with Bill Maher, The McLaughlin Report and The Daily Show.
In 2012, GQ named Klein to their “50 Most Powerful People in Washington” list saying “as proprietor of the Post’s ‘Wonkblog’, Klein has become a singular journalistic force” and Esquire named him to their “79 Things We Can All Agree On” list saying, “Ezra Klein gives economics columnists a good name.” In 2014, Vanity Fair named him one of the media’s “new disrupters.”
This event is sponsored by the Distinguished Lectures Committee through the Office of Student Activities and is free to current University of Arkansas students who pay the Student Activities Fee and students must show ID for entrance. Admission for general public and non-fee-paying students is contingent upon seating availability and will be on a first-come, first-served basis after fee-paying students are admitted.
The event is free, and the public is invited.
READ MORE: Learning from the Best: Warren Stephens to Give Talk on Free Trade, Entrepreneurship