Anatoly Kurmanaev

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Person.png Anatoly Kurmanaev LinkedIn TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(journalist)
BornNovosibirsk, Russia
NationalityUS (Born: Russian)
Journalist in corporate media including Bloomberg,The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times

Employment.png Moscow Correspondent

In office
2022 - Present
EmployerNew York Times

Employment.png Venezuela Correspondent

In office
February 2019 - May 2021
EmployerNew York Times
"Every journalist has an audience he caters for and in my case, it’s the financial community. You are a mercenary in a sense."

Employment.png Venezuela Reporter

In office
October 2015 - February 2019
EmployerWall Street Journal
"Every journalist has an audience he caters for and in my case, it’s the financial community. You are a mercenary in a sense."

Employment.png Economy & Government Reporter

In office
December 2012 - October 2015
EmployerBloomberg
"Every journalist has an audience he caters for and in my case, it’s the financial community. You are a mercenary in a sense."

Anatoly Kurmanaev is a journalist in corporate media including Bloomberg,The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times.[1][2][3]

Career

Kurmanaev built his journalism career in Latin America, where he arrived in 2010 as a young freelancer. He spent the following decade covering the region's economy and politics for a range of publications, including at Bloomberg,The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. He joined The New York Times's Moscow bureau in late 2022.[4]

Opinions

“"Every journalist has an audience he caters for and in my case, it’s the financial community. You are a mercenary in a sense. You’re there to provide information to a particular client that they find important and it's not good or bad, it’s just the way it is...A couple of times from my experience you try to use, I wouldn’t call them 'cheap tricks', but yeah, kind of sexy tricks. Just last week we had a story about condom shortages in Venezuela. At the official exchange rate condoms were at like $750 dollars or something and the headline was something like ‘$750 dollar condom in Venezuela’ and everyone clicks it, everyone is like 'Jesus, why do they sell it for like $750?'" (We don't learn until the ninth paragraph of Kurmanaev's article that a pack of condoms actually cost about the same as it did in the US at the time.)”
Anatoly Kurmanaev (2019)  [5]


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References