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  1. Sam Dolnick
    American journalist, editor, and producer

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  1. Jun 11, 2014 · Sam Dolnick is deputy sports editor at The New York Times. He won the 2012 George Polk Award for Justice Reporting. He won the 2012 George Polk Award for Justice Reporting. Editor: Lauren Kern

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    • Sam Dolnick
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sam_DolnickSam Dolnick - Wikipedia

    Michael Golden (uncle) Ben Dolnick (brother) Awards. George Polk Award (2013) Worth Bingham Prize (2012) Sam Dolnick is an American journalist, film and television producer, and deputy managing editor for The New York Times. [1] He helped launch The Daily podcast and the documentary series, The Weekly. [2]

    • Journalist, newspaper editor, television producer
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  4. Sam Dolnick is a deputy managing editor. He has been a sports editor, metro reporter and foreign correspondent in New Delhi. He is a winner of the George Polk Award for Justice Reporting.

  5. Dec 5, 2018 · Sam Dolnick is an assistant managing editor, overseeing The Times’s audio report, its work in film and television, and other digital projects. He was formerly the deputy sports editor and a ...

    • 4 min
    • Sam Dolnick
    • Mr. Day Lily
    • Recruitment
    • Life on The Road
    • The Arrest
    • The Trial

    We first meet Stone in 2005 at a mere 75, a dapper figure at a day lily horticulture convention who collects trophies, flirts with the ladies, and buys drinks for the guys—a regular Mr. Congeniality. But while he’s living it up at the convention, he fails to make it to his daughter’s wedding, where he’s supposed to walk her down the aisle. This lea...

    In the film, Stone has a thriving business selling his day lily varieties via a catalog. But by 2017, his business has been thoroughly disrupted by the internet and is bankrupt. His house is in foreclosure, he’s fired his workforce, and all his belongings are packed into his battered pickup. He arrives uninvited at his granddaughter’s bridal brunch...

    In the film, Stone settles smoothly into his life as a courier. He picks up duffel bags at a tire shop in El Paso, happily drives to motels in the Midwest singing along to the radio, and leaves the key in his truck’s ignition. When he returns to the truck in the morning, the drugs are gone, and there’s an envelope stuffed with cash in the glove com...

    In the movie, Colin Bates (Cooper), the Drug Enforcement Administration agent working out of the agency’s Chicago office who is tasked with pursuing the cartel, busts a cartel operative who, in return for entering witness protection, brings them a prize: a page stolen from a ledger, complete with coded names, courier routes, and earnings. It is thi...

    In the film, Stone ignores his lawyer’s advice and, stricken by remorse for breaking the law and neglecting his family, pleads guilty. The last we see of him is in a federal penitentiary, tending lilies in the prison garden. Sharp did indeed plead guilty at his trial in October 2013, without cooperating with the authorities. He did express some rem...

    • Ellin Stein
  6. Dec 13, 2023 · The New York Times’ first director of AI signals key role the technology will play in news production ... A.I.,” Executive Editor Joe Kahn and Deputy Managing Editor Sam Dolnick said in a memo ...

  7. Dec 12, 2018 · Published 3:25 PM PDT, December 12, 2018. Both tender apologia and vigorous justification, Clint Eastwood’s “The Mule” is a deeply, fascinatingly personal meditation from the 88-year-old director who, like his aged drug mule protagonist, has spent a long time on the road. “The Mule” is the indefatigable Eastwood’s second film just ...

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