Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugriff auf über 9.000 Zeitschriften, Zeitungen und Premium-Artikel für nur

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jahr

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

The Insider

The Atlantic

|

April 2024

Is Kara Swisher tearing down tech billionaires—or burnishing their legends?

- Helen Lewis

The Insider

Few journalists and their sources have fallen out as completely as Kara Swisher and Elon Musk. The reporter met the future billionaire in the late 1990s, when she was a tech correspondent for The Wall Street Journal and he was just another Silicon Valley boy wonder.

Over more than two decades, they developed a spiky but mutually useful relationship, conducted through informal emails and texts as well as public interviews.

Their frenemy shtick was on display, for example, when Swisher interviewed Musk for Vox on Halloween in 2018. He deadpanned that he loved her "costume." She was wearing her signature look black leather jacket, black jeans, aviator sunglasses presumably just out of view. "Thank you! I'm dressed as a lesbian from the Castro in San Francisco," she replied. The pair posed together for a photograph: him seated and her standing, one arm casually resting on his shoulder, an image that signaled she was more than a mere stenographer or grateful supplicant. She was a Silicon Valley player in her own right.

That image illustrates the pact that Swisher has developed with so many masters of the tech universe ever since she began to cover (and champion) the industry. She would be tough and inquisitive, asking the types of blunt questions about screwups and misfires that these supposed visionaries rarely faced in their heavily gatekept existence. They would parry her blows with charm, self-deprecating humor, and occasionally unwise honesty or unwitting selfexposure. Both would derive some benefit. At a minimum, the tech overlords would get credit for stepping into the gladiatorial arena. The audience benefited, too, from Swisher acting as our eyes and ears inside an industry that was changing our lives.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Atlantic

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

What Dante Is Trying to Tell Us

A colloquial translation of Paradiso might make people actually read it.

time to read

10 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

Sense of an Ending

Julian Barnes says goodbye to the novel

time to read

9 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

IS THIS WHAT PATRIOTISM LOOKS LIKE?

Why an ex—police officer assaulted a fellow cop on January 6

time to read

37 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

THE PURGED

DONALD TRUMP'S DESTRUCTION OF THE CIVIL SERVICE IS A TRAGEDY NOT JUST FOR THE ROUGHLY 300,000 WORKERS WHO HAVE BEEN DISCARDED, BUT FOR AN ENTIRE NATION.

time to read

8 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

GROUNDED

THE SPACE PROGRAM ENNOBLED AMERICAN CULTURE AND ADVANCED AMERICAN SCIENCE. DONALD TRUMP HAS CHOSEN TO END THAT ERA OF AMBITION.

time to read

17 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

The New History of Fighting Slavery

What we learn by tracing rebellions from Africa to the Americas

time to read

10 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

MICAELA WHITE

By the beginning of 2025, there was a famine in Sudan, which meant that it was only a matter of time before the U.S.government dispatched Micaela White to the scene. She was America's fixer of choice.

time to read

2 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

WHAT JEFFREY EPSTEIN DIDN'T UNDERSTAND ABOUT LOLITA

Everything.

time to read

5 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

Who Gets to Be Indian- And Who Decides?

The very American story of Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance

time to read

22 mins

February 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

I'm Not From the Government but I'm Here to Help

The Trump administration is trying to eliminate federal services? Fine. I'll do everything myself.

time to read

24 mins

February 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size