Who is the editor of vice?

Ellis Jones
As of February 2018, the magazine’s editor-in-chief is Ellis Jones.

How do I submit a story to Vice news?

If you’re interested in pitching us a story idea, keep reading. If you’d like to license some of our content or interview one of our journalists, please email [email protected]. If you’d like to advertise with us, please email [email protected].

Who is behind Vice com?

Shane Smith
Vice Media

Type Private, limited liability company
Revenue $1 Billion (2016)
Owner Shane Smith (20%) The Walt Disney Company (16%) A&E Networks (20%) TPG Capital (44%) Soros Fund Management (10%) James Murdoch (minority stake)
Number of employees 3,000
Website company.vice.com

Who are the vice reporters?

Correspondents, crew

  • Shane Smith – vice co-founder & CEO, executive producer.
  • Suroosh Alvi – vice co-founder, correspondent, executive producer.
  • Thomas Morton – correspondent.
  • Ben Anderson – correspondent and senior producer.
  • Vikram Gandhi – correspondent and producer.
  • Isobel Yeung – correspondent and producer.

What should I not pitch to vice?

Never Pitch Any of These Things to Us Again

  • KILLING SOMEONE ON ACID.
  • LARPING.
  • ART MADE OF BODILY FLUIDS.
  • BRONIES.
  • FASHION SHOOTS THAT GOT CANNED FROM SOME OTHER MAGAZINE.
  • NINETY PERCENT OF TATTOO PITCHES.
  • A NEW DRUG THAT ISN’T NEW, IT’S JUST MEPHEDRONE WITH A NEW NAME.

How do I contact Vice with a story?

  1. GLOBAL HQ – BROOKLYN. 49 S 2nd Street, Brooklyn, NY 11249.
  2. Press. [email protected].
  3. Advertising. [email protected].
  4. Pitches. [email protected]. [email protected]. [email protected]. [email protected].

Why is vice called vice?

Etymology. The modern English term that best captures its original meaning is the word vicious, which means “full of vice”. In this sense, the word vice comes from the Latin word vitium, meaning “failing or defect”.

Where is Vice headquarters located?

New York, NY
Vice Media/Headquarters

Is Vice a good company to work for?

Vice does lots of good work, and Vice knows it, and uses it to its advantage. Most of the Vice employees that spoke to us don’t hate Vice—they love(d) it. All they want is decent pay and conditions in which to do the good work that attracted them to the job in the first place.