June 23, 2006
The Nation publisher emeritus Victor Navasky says the danger of objectivity is uniformity. The Devil Wears Prada star Stanley Tucci gives his take on why Hollywood stereotypes race.
Victor Navasky
After helming The Nation for almost 30 years, professor, publisher and editor Victor Navasky became its publisher emeritus last year. He's also director of Columbia University's George Delacorte Center for Magazine Journalism. He was previously an editor at the New York Times Magazine. Navasky is the author of several books, including Kennedy Justice, the award-winning Naming Names and A Matter of Opinion. A Yale Law grad, he's contributed articles and reviews to numerous magazines and journals of opinion.
Stanley Tucci
Stanley Tucci is an accomplished actor, writer, director and producer. His credits include the films Maid in Manhattan and Road to Perdition and award-winning performances on television, including HBO's Conspiracy and Winchell. For his work behind the camera, he won a New York Film Critics Circle Best New Director award with Big Night, which he co-wrote, co-directed, co-produced and starred in. A native of upstate New York, Tucci began his career on the stage. He's next up in The Devil Wears Prada.


