Chloe Fox
Chloe Fox is the Editor of , a partnership of Civil Beat and The Huffington Post that launched in 2013. She is also a member of the Civil Beat Editorial Board.
Chloe started her career in magazines after graduating from the Columbia Publishing Course at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. She worked first as the assistant to the Editor-in-Chief of Men’s Vogue, and was later absorbed into the mothership when Men’s Vogue folded. At Vogue, she worked mostly on original content and the redesign for Vogue.com as well as shuttering Men’s Vogue.
In 2010, Chloe joined the staff of The New Yorker as an assistant editor. She worked directly with the executive editor to oversee the magazine’s nonfiction and she managed the Mail page as well as the much-beloved Newsbreaks. She also helped produce the weekly Political Scene podcast.
Chloe left The New Yorker in 2012 when her husband, an officer in the U.S. Army, returned from a year-long deployment to Afghanistan. She continued to work as a freelance writer for The New Yorker website, contributing political reporting and commentary, book reviews and essays. She also freelanced for NFocus, a lifestyle magazine in Nashville, TN.
As a military spouse, Chloe has been involved with the national non-profit Blue Star Families since its inception in 2008. She regularly writes and edits policy memos and presentations that aim to streamline collaboration with government agencies and improve services to military families and transitioning veterans.
Chloe grew up between New York City, Washington, D.C., and Boston, Massachusetts, and graduated from Georgetown University in 2007. She has since lived in Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee, but is grateful the Army finally sent her and her husband to Hawaii. They welcomed a son in May of 2014 and have high hopes for his future surfing career.
Chloe Fox: How 2016 Shook The Pedestal Of Old White Men
After a year of very bad publicity, the 鈥渂rand鈥 of old white men is suffering like never before in American culture.
Why You Can’t Understand Obama Until You Understand Hawaii
“What’s best in me, and what’s best in my message, is consistent with the tradition of Hawaii,” then-Senator Obama told a Honolulu audience in 2004.
Scientists Are Shocked These Cyclones Missed Hawaii
A new National Weather Service map shows just how lucky Hawaii has been with all those storms churning out there.
In With The New: For The Generation Raised On Terrorism, Empathy Isn’t Empty
For better or worse, millennials can’t look away. They are caring and civic minded, whether the injustices they perceive are trivial or of global importance.
In With The New: How History Repeats Itself and Gen Z’s Coming Out Party
Generation Z, the generation after the millennials, is entering adulthood on a tidal wave of glitter, weed and presidential Kardashians.
In With The New: Will Millennials’ Disdain For Driving Help Oahu’s Traffic Woes?
Many millennials prefer biking, walking and public transit over driving. Maybe that’s why the percentage of millennial drivers is dropping in Hawaii.
In With The New: Millennials Will Take Us Back to the Future
It鈥檚 been more than 20 years since America has done anything to help working families. Millennials are poised聽to force the issue.
In With The New: Harnessing The Power Of Hashtags
Hashtag activism, like the millennials who introduced it, has grown up a lot in the past few years.
In With the New: Time For Millennials To Revolutionize Government IT
Young people are finding it hard to work in government jobs that bog them down in red tape and archaic computer systems. In that regard, Hawaii is among the worst.