(Redirected from Ken Whyte)'Kenneth Whyte' (born
August 12,
1960 in
Winnipeg, Manitoba, grew up in
Edmonton, Alberta) is a
Canadian newspaper and magazine
editor.
He has been publisher and editor-in-chief of ''
Maclean's'', Canada's only weekly newsmagazine, since March 2005.
Whyte began his career in journalism as a sports reporter at the ''Sherwood Park News'', where he went on to serve as editor-in-chief of the paper. He joined ''
Alberta Report'' as a reporter in the mid-
1980s and later served as executive editor of the magazine.
In 1994, Whyte was appointed editor of ''
Saturday Night''. Under his leadership, the magazine won more awards and gained a higher readership than at any time in its 115-year history.
In 1998, he was named editor-in-chief of the newly launched conservative newspaper ''
National Post''. The paper was founded by
Conrad Black to combat what he saw as an "over-liberalizing" of editorial policy in Canadian newspapers. Under Whyte's editorship, the ''Post'' attracted a solid right-wing readership, particularly in Western Canada. In its early days, the newspaper was considered by many as the unofficial mouthpiece of the Western-based
Reform Party of Canada. The ''Post'' actively endorsed a "unite-the-right" movement in Canada, while fiercely criticizing the Liberal government of prime minister
Jean Chrétien. The ''Post'' under Whyte's editorship set a new standard in Canadian journalism, editorially and visually, though it was criticized for its strident
neo-conservatism and British-style blurring of opinion and news. The paper also suffered heavy financial losses, estimated at $60-million annually.
In early 2003, after ownership of the ''Post'' changed hands from Black to
Izzy Asper, Whyte left the paper in a purge of the newspaper's senior management. He was replaced by
Matthew Fraser, an Asper appointee who had been the paper's media columnist.
Following his departure from the ''Post'', Whyte became visiting scholar in media and public policy at
McGill University. Whyte is also a member of the
board of governors of the
Donner Canadian Foundation, and is a senior fellow of
Massey College at the
University of Toronto.
After his appointment as editor/publisher of ''Maclean's'', Whyte fired several senior editors and recruited a large number of editorial staff from the ''National Post''. These changes influenced the tone and focus of ''Maclean's'', considered by some to be a left-liberal newsmagazine with a penchant for anglo-Canadian nationalism and implicit anti-Americanism. The magazine also had been suffering from steadily eroding circulation and readership levels, largely due to a format and tone long considered tired and out-of-touch with consumer tastes. Whyte has won praise for reinvigorating the magazine, though critics have observed that he has transformed ''Maclean's'' into an editorial product with the same kind of conservative voice as the ''National Post''.
External links
★
CBC.ca: The New Maclean's
★
Whyte Noise
★
Ken Whyte's Shades of Grey