I grew up, a kid in New Jersey.
— Jared Kushner
I don't have time to date.
Browseability is the key online.
Peter Kaplan was a giant.
Growing up, around the dinner table my father and I didn't talk sports. We talked business.
People are always alert to any change and skeptical by nature.
I love my father, but I have worked to develop a separate and distinct identity in different projects I have worked on.
New York City is the most important location in the world... it is the center for fashion, culture and finance.
'The Observer's Very Short List' is another example of how the Observer Media Group offers its readers the most cutting-edge information, available in a variety of platforms and written by an editorial staff known for its distinctive and discerning style and wit.
My father's favorite movie was 'The Dirty Dozen.'
I ran my own business when I was 19, buying condos and renovating apartment buildings.
It's easier to build a business around a first-class product, even if it's a more expensive product to produce.
People are hysterical about the death of newspapers, and I would say, 'They're not dying; they're just kind of reinventing themselves.'
I'm definitely scared about newspapers. The problem is nobody wants to catch a falling knife, and nobody knows where things will stabilise. The value of newspapers has dropped significantly. I think we still have more pain to be felt.
When I bought 'The New York Observer,' my experience in journalism was limited to a single article I had written for a college magazine.
You have to understand the separation between what exists in the print media and what exists in reality. It's important to never lose track of reality.
Age is a convenient barometer of what a person is capable of, but it is only one.
I own 'The New York Observer.'
Peter Kaplan was a partner, a mentor, and a friend.
I know I've done good things, I know I've done bad things.
I speak with my father about everything in my life.
The only things that are really permanent are love, family, friendship, and that is a lesson. At the end of the day, that's really what it boils down to. The rest of it is just stuff.
I have six jobs.
People who live in SoHo want to be close to the energy, culture, and eccentricities of New York's most charming neighborhoods.
Politicians often say to me, 'Articles in the 'Observer' don't get me votes, but you get me money.'
The goal is to do things that are exciting and respectable.
I have major sleeping problems. I'd rather be up thinking about things than actually sleeping.
In this day and age, much of journalism is about right or left, conservative or liberal, and 'The Observer' is just that: an observer. It is about truth.
I always thought, 'Will I go into the business, or will I not go into the business?' But when my father got arrested, I really didn't have a choice. I was the oldest son, and it was something that had to be done.
The N.Y.C. tech scene is vibrant, and Betabeat will be a great vehicle to cover it in depth.
Every 'Observer' writer wants to be a novelist.
I was raised to work for my father when I was four.