David Segal | |
---|---|
Occupation(s) | newspaper columnist and reporter |
Employer | The New York Times |
Known for | "The Haggler" customer service column |
David Segal is a newspaper columnist and reporter. [1] He was the author of "The Haggler", a bi-weekly column in the Sunday edition of The New York Times . Segal has received praise for his writing and reporting skills. [2] [3]
Until June 11, 2017 Segal authored the bi-weekly "The Haggler" column in the Sunday edition of The New York Times, in which he printed and attempted to resolve reader-submitted letters about plights in customer service. His column covered companies such as Sears, [4] Apple, [5] Samsung, [6] and many others. [7] It was generally written in a semi-third person style, in which he referred to himself as "The Haggler" rather than "I". [7] His interventions were generally successful. [8] [9]
David Segal has written pieces for The New York Times about technology and business topics including search-engine optimization [10] and SEC-related fraud. [11] He was one of a team of New York Times reporters who won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting for a series of 10 articles about the business practices of Apple and other technology companies. [12] [13]
Segal's December 2010 story about a Brooklyn-based online eyeglass seller, Vitaly Borker, who manipulated his site's Google search ranking through negative publicity [14] received attention from the media and prompted Google to alter its algorithms. [15]
Before joining the New York Times in 2008, Segal worked for 14 years at The Washington Post , four of them spent as the paper's pop music critic and four others as the paper's Style section correspondent in New York City. [16] At The Post, Segal wrote a profile about a British man who sued Wilco for using sounds he'd recorded in the band's album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. [17] This profile was later published in Da Capo Best Music Writing 2005. [18]
Segal was an editor at The Washington Monthly in 1993 and 1994 and remains a contributing editor for the magazine. [19] Since 2004, he has also contributed stories to the radio show This American Life . [20]
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