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Gregory S. Zuckerman[1] (born September 7, 1966) is an American investigative journalist, bestselling author, and special writer at The Wall Street Journal. Known for his in-depth reporting on finance, energy, and biotechnology, Zuckerman has written extensively about major Wall Street trades, the fracking boom, and the development of COVID-19 vaccines. He is the author of several acclaimed nonfiction books, including The Greatest Trade Ever, The Man Who Solved the Market, and A Shot to Save the World. A three-time Gerald Loeb Award winner, Zuckerman is recognized for breaking significant financial news and profiling influential figures in business and science.

Education and family

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Gregory Zuckerman was born on September 7, 1966, to a Jewish-American family.[2][3] He grew up in Rhode Island and graduated from Brandeis University, magna cum laude, in 1988. He now lives in New Jersey with his wife and two sons. He works at the New York City bureau of The Wall Street Journal.[4]

Career

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Zuckerman started his journalism career as managing editor of Mergers and Acquisitions Report, a newsletter published by Investment Dealers' Digest. He left that position to write for the New York Post covering media companies. In 1996, Zuckerman joined The Wall Street Journal as a financial reporter.

At The Wall Street Journal, Zuckerman covered credit markets and wrote the widely read "Heard on the Street" column. As a special reporter in the Money and Investing section, he covers financial trades, hedge funds, private equity firms, the energy revolution, and other investing and business topics.

Zuckerman appears regularly on CNBC, Fox Business, Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg Television, and various television networks. He regularly appears on National Public Radio, BBC, ABC Radio, Bloomberg Radio, and radio stations around the globe. He also gives speeches to business groups on a variety of topics. During one year, he spoke to groups in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Houston, Dallas, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Calgary, Montreal, and Niagara Falls.[5]

In October 2021, he published A Shot to Save the World: The Inside Story of the Life-or-Death Race for a COVID-19 Vaccine about developing an mRNA vaccine. On November 7, 2021, he was featured in an interview with the noted virologists of This Week in Virology, TWiV.[6]

Awards and honors

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Zuckerman is a three-time winner of the Gerald Loeb Award, the highest honor in business journalism. In 2015, he won the Gerald Loeb Award for Breaking News,[7] for a series of stories revealing discord among Bill Gross, founder of bond powerhouse Pimco, and others at the firm, including Mohamed El-Erian. The stories precipitated Mr. Gross's surprise departure from Pimco.

In 2007, Zuckerman was part of a team that won the Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline Writing coverage of the collapse of hedge fund Amaranth Advisors.[8] In 2003, he won the Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline Writing for coverage of the demise of telecom provider WorldCom.[9] He was part of a team that won the New York Press Club Journalism award in 2008. He was a finalist for the 2008 Loeb award for coverage of the mortgage meltdown and a finalist for the 2011 Loeb award for investigative news coverage of the insider trading scandal.

He was part of a team that won the New York Press Club Journalism Award for investigative news coverage of the insider trading scandal in 2011.

Zuckerman broke the story about the trades by J. P. Morgan's London Whale in 2012.[10][11][12]

He shared the 2015 Gerald Loeb Award for Breaking News for "Abdication of the 'Bond King'" with Kirsten Grind.[13]

Books

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  • The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History (2009)
  • The Frackers: The Outrageous Inside Story of the New Billionaire Wildcatters (2013), examines various individuals and independent companies who pioneered the fracking process within the United States.[14][15]
  • Rising Above: How 11 Athletes Overcame Challenges in their Youth to Become Stars (2016), was authored by Greg Zuckerman and his two sons; it is a book for young readers and adults that describes the remarkable stories of how various athletes overcame imposing setbacks in their youth.
  • Rising Above: Inspiring Women in Sports (2018), was authored by Greg Zuckerman and his sons: it is a second book for young readers.
  • The Man Who Solved the Market: How Jim Simons Launched the Quant Revolution (2019), the third non-fiction adult book authored by Greg Zuckerman is about Jim Simons of Renaissance Technologies. The Man Who Solved The Market was a New York Times and Wall Street Journal best seller. It was # 1 on the New York Times list of top-selling business books for the month of November, 2019, and was shortlisted in the FT/McKinsey competition for 2019 business book of the year.[16][17]
  • A Shot to Save the World: The Inside Story of the Life-or-Death Race for a COVID-19 Vaccine (2021)

References

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from Grokipedia
Gregory S. Zuckerman (born September 7, 1966) is an American investigative journalist and bestselling author renowned for his in-depth reporting on finance, investing, and business innovation.[1][2] As a Special Writer at The Wall Street Journal, where he has worked since joining in 1996, Zuckerman focuses on hedge funds, private equity, credit markets, and major market events, earning him three Gerald Loeb Awards for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism in 2003, 2007, and 2015.[1][2] His work has also been recognized with a 2008 New York Press Club Journalism Award and two Gerald Loeb Award finalist nominations in 2008 and 2011.[2] Zuckerman graduated magna cum laude from Brandeis University in 1988 with a major in politics and coursework in economics, where he honed his analytical skills through involvement in campus radio and sports reporting.[1][3] Before joining The Wall Street Journal, he wrote about media companies at the New York Post and served as managing editor of the Mergers & Acquisitions Report at Investment Dealers’ Digest, building expertise in financial journalism despite early career setbacks.[1][2] Throughout his career, Zuckerman has broken significant stories, including J.P. Morgan's "London Whale" trading scandal in 2012 and the internal conflicts leading to Bill Gross's 2014 departure from PIMCO.[2] He previously wrote the "Heard on the Street" column at the Journal, providing market analysis, and has authored several acclaimed books that chronicle pivotal figures and events in finance and beyond.[1][3] His notable titles include The Greatest Trade Ever (2010), which details John Paulson's bet against the housing market; The Frackers (2014), on the shale oil revolution; The Man Who Solved the Market (2019), a biography of quant pioneer Jim Simons; and A Shot to Save the World (2021), exploring the development of the COVID-19 vaccine.[1][2] He has also co-authored inspirational sports books with his sons, Rising Above: How 11 Athletes Overcame Challenges (2016) and Rising Above: Inspiring Women in Sports (2018).[1] Zuckerman's books have been named among the best of their years by outlets like the Financial Times and Forbes.[2]

Early life and education

Family background

Gregory Zuckerman was born on September 7, 1966, in Providence, Rhode Island, to a Jewish-American family. His father was an academic who taught at Brown University, and his mother worked as a teacher before transitioning to selling insurance, providing a modest household environment without direct connections to finance or journalism. Despite this, Zuckerman's upbringing in Rhode Island fostered an early fascination with Wall Street; as a young boy, he used his bar mitzvah money to trade stocks during summer camp, though he lost most of it, sparking his interest in markets and investing.[4][5][6] The family's Orthodox Jewish heritage played a significant role in shaping Zuckerman's values, emphasizing observance of Shabbat and ethical principles like kiddush Hashem (sanctifying God's name), which influenced his approach to personal integrity and professional challenges in a high-pressure field. This cultural foundation, rooted in Rhode Island's Jewish community, contributed to his resilient identity amid a non-finance-oriented home life.[6][7] Zuckerman resides in West Orange, New Jersey, with his wife and two sons, Gabriel and Eli. A distinctive aspect of his family dynamics is their collaborative involvement in writing, highlighting a shared passion for storytelling and perseverance.[2][6]

Academic background

Gregory Zuckerman graduated from Brandeis University in 1988 with a bachelor's degree in politics and coursework in economics, earning the distinction of magna cum laude.[8][2][3] During his time at Brandeis, Zuckerman's studies in politics and economics provided him with a strong foundation in financial markets, quantitative analysis, and economic theory, which later informed his reporting on complex Wall Street topics. While he did not contribute to the campus newspaper The Justice, he hosted a reggae show on the campus radio station WBRS and provided sports reporting on a program called the “Adam Brauer Bar Mitzvah Hour” during his first year, experiences that helped develop his interest in storytelling and honed critical thinking skills essential for investigative financial journalism.[8][3] This early immersion in business concepts shaped his analytical approach, enabling him to dissect intricate investment strategies and market dynamics in his professional work.[8] Supported by his family background in Rhode Island, Zuckerman's access to higher education at Brandeis allowed him to pursue these interests without prior journalism experience, setting the stage for his pivot to reporting after graduation.[8]

Career

Pre-journalism roles

Following his graduation from Brandeis University in 1988 with a major in politics and coursework in economics, magna cum laude, Zuckerman launched his journalism career as the managing editor of the Mergers & Acquisitions Report, a weekly newsletter published by Investment Dealers' Digest that tracked and analyzed merger and acquisition deals across financial markets.[2] In this role, he oversaw the editorial process for content focused on corporate transactions, investment banking activities, and emerging trends in deal-making, which helped him develop a deep understanding of finance, corporate strategy, and sector-specific dynamics including energy and technology.[2][9] Zuckerman's work at the newsletter built foundational skills in investigative business reporting and editing financial news, emphasizing rigorous analysis of high-stakes deals and their broader economic implications. These experiences honed his ability to distill complex corporate events into accessible insights, laying the groundwork for more prominent reporting opportunities. After leaving the Mergers & Acquisitions Report, he transitioned to the New York Post as a financial reporter, where he covered media companies and their business developments, further sharpening his expertise in industry-specific journalism.[10][2] Through these early positions, spanning the late 1980s to mid-1990s, Zuckerman gained practical knowledge in the intersections of finance, corporate governance, and energy sectors, which proved instrumental in bridging his initial roles to advanced business journalism.[1]

Wall Street Journal tenure

Gregory Zuckerman joined The Wall Street Journal in 1996 as a financial reporter, where he initially covered developments in finance, energy, and biotechnology sectors.[1][2] His early reporting focused on key market trends, including credit markets and emerging investment strategies, drawing on his prior experience editing financial publications to adapt quickly to the demands of daily business journalism.[2] Throughout the 2000s and beyond, Zuckerman transitioned into an investigative reporter role, delving into high-stakes financial trades, hedge funds, private equity, and the energy revolution, such as the fracking boom.[2] He also served as the lead writer for the widely read "Heard on the Street" column, providing analysis on Wall Street dynamics and influencing the paper's approach to business commentary during periods of market volatility.[1] By the 2010s, his work expanded to include biotechnology innovations and major corporate deals, contributing to WSJ's in-depth coverage of sector-specific risks and opportunities.[11] As of 2025, Zuckerman holds the position of Special Writer at the Journal, marking nearly three decades of service with over 25 years dedicated to investigative business reporting.[12] In this role, he continues to author columns and features on investing topics, including cryptocurrency strategies and hedge fund performance, shaping ongoing discussions in financial media.[13]

Key investigative stories

Zuckerman's investigative reporting at The Wall Street Journal often relies on cultivating sources within hedge funds, trading desks, and corporate executives to uncover hidden dynamics in financial markets and industries. His approach emphasizes persistent follow-ups and access to internal documents, enabling revelations that influence regulatory scrutiny and market behavior.[3] In 2006, Zuckerman detailed the spectacular collapse of hedge fund Amaranth Advisors, which suffered $6 billion in losses primarily from concentrated bets on natural gas prices that unraveled due to shifting market conditions and inadequate risk controls. Drawing on interviews with traders and investors, he exposed how the fund's aggressive positions amplified volatility in energy derivatives, prompting broader industry discussions on leverage limits and contributing to the fund's rapid unwind by JP Morgan and Citadel. The coverage, part of a team effort, earned a Gerald Loeb Award in 2007 for breaking news on the debacle.[14][2] Zuckerman's 2012 reporting on J.P. Morgan Chase's "London Whale" scandal revealed how trader Bruno Iksil's massive credit derivatives positions in London led to a $6 billion trading loss, the largest in the bank's history at the time. Sourcing from market participants and internal memos, he highlighted how the trades distorted corporate bond markets, forcing other firms to hedge aggressively and sparking congressional hearings on bank risk management. Follow-up pieces in subsequent years, including Iksil's 2016 interview blaming senior executives, underscored ongoing legal repercussions and reforms in derivatives oversight.[15][16] His 2014 series on internal turmoil at Pacific Investment Management Co. (Pimco) exposed escalating conflicts between star manager Bill Gross and CEO Mohamed El-Erian, culminating in El-Erian's abrupt resignation amid disputes over investment strategy and leadership style. Through anonymous executive sources and performance data, Zuckerman illustrated how Gross's domineering approach eroded team cohesion, leading to Gross's own departure later that year and triggering $40 billion in client outflows. The reporting, which won a 2015 Gerald Loeb Award, illuminated challenges in managing alpha-generating firms and influenced Pimco's subsequent restructuring.[17][18] In the energy sector during the 2010s, Zuckerman's exposés chronicled the fracking revolution, revealing how independent wildcatters like Aubrey McClendon and Harold Hamm pioneered horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing techniques to unlock shale reserves, contributing to the U.S. becoming the world's largest crude oil producer by 2018 and a net petroleum exporter by 2019. Sourcing from drillers and geologists, his articles detailed the high-risk investments and technological breakthroughs that spurred a $1 trillion industry boom, while also noting environmental concerns like water contamination that fueled regulatory debates. This work provided early insights into geopolitical shifts, including reduced reliance on Middle Eastern oil.[19][3] More recently in biotechnology, Zuckerman investigated allegations surrounding Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine announcement in 2020, reporting in 2025 that U.S. prosecutors were examining claims from a former Pfizer executive—now at GlaxoSmithKline—that the company delayed positive trial results until after the presidential election to avoid political influence. Based on interviews with involved parties and regulatory filings, the story raised questions about corporate timing in public health crises and prompted renewed scrutiny of vaccine development transparency during the pandemic.[20]

Writing and publications

Solo-authored books

Gregory Zuckerman's solo-authored books explore pivotal moments in finance, energy, and scientific innovation, drawing on his extensive reporting to illuminate the human stories behind transformative events. His works emphasize the risks, ingenuity, and personalities involved in high-stakes decisions, often revealing how overlooked insights led to monumental shifts in markets and society. Through rigorous interviews and access to key figures, Zuckerman provides insider accounts that blend narrative drive with analytical depth, contributing to public understanding of complex economic and technological landscapes. The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History, published on November 3, 2009, by Crown Business, chronicles hedge fund manager John Paulson's bold bet against the U.S. subprime mortgage market in 2006, which netted his firm approximately $15 billion amid the 2008 financial crisis. Zuckerman details Paulson's research process, including his team's analysis of rising home prices, lax lending standards, and the overvaluation of mortgage-backed securities, which convinced him the housing bubble was unsustainable. The book highlights key interviews with Paulson himself, who granted exclusive cooperation, as well as with other traders, bankers, and regulators who underestimated the risks, offering a vivid portrayal of Wall Street's complacency. Critically acclaimed for demystifying complex derivatives and credit default swaps, it became a New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller, translated into nine languages, and praised by reviewers for its gripping narrative of foresight amid catastrophe.[21][22] In The Frackers: The Outrageous Inside Story of the New Billionaire Wildcatters, released on November 5, 2013, by Portfolio, Zuckerman examines the U.S. shale revolution that reshaped global energy markets through hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling. The narrative profiles pioneers such as George Mitchell, who persisted with fracking techniques despite decades of skepticism from industry experts, and Aubrey McClendon, the aggressive executive at Chesapeake Energy who scaled operations amid volatile oil prices. Zuckerman's research involved hundreds of interviews with wildcatters, engineers, and environmental critics, uncovering the technological breakthroughs—like Mitchell's adaptation of 1940s-era methods—and the personal fortunes made and lost, including billions in wealth creation that reduced U.S. dependence on imported oil. Named among the best books of 2014 by The Financial Times and a national bestseller, the book was lauded for its balanced depiction of innovation's environmental controversies and economic impacts, providing a seminal account of how individual tenacity upended the oil industry.[23][24][25] The Man Who Solved the Market: How Jim Simons Launched the Quant Revolution, published on November 5, 2019, by Portfolio, offers an authorized biography of mathematician Jim Simons and the secretive Renaissance Technologies hedge fund, which pioneered quantitative trading using algorithms and data analysis to achieve unparalleled returns. Zuckerman traces the origins of quant investing from Simons's code-breaking work at the Institute for Defense Analyses to Renaissance's Medallion Fund, which averaged over 66% annual returns before fees from 1988 to 2018, through interviews with Simons, former employees, and competitors who navigated the firm's intense secrecy and hiring of PhDs over traditional financiers. The book elucidates key innovations, such as applying hidden Markov models to predict market patterns, while exploring the cultural clashes between academics and Wall Street. A New York Times bestseller and shortlisted for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award, it received widespread praise for revealing the mechanics of data-driven investing and its profound influence on modern finance.[26][27][28] Zuckerman's most recent solo work, A Shot to Save the World: The Inside Story of the Life-or-Death Race for a COVID-19 Vaccine, issued on October 26, 2021, by Portfolio, documents the global sprint to develop effective vaccines during the 2020 pandemic, centering on mRNA technology's breakthrough after years of marginalization. It profiles scientists like Katalin Karikó, whose persistent research on mRNA—initially dismissed by peers—enabled rapid adaptation by Moderna and BioNTech/Pfizer, alongside executives navigating regulatory hurdles, funding shortages, and international rivalries. Drawing from exclusive interviews with over 200 participants, including Karikó, Ugur Sahin, and Özlem Türeci, as well as access to confidential documents and labs, Zuckerman conveys the high stakes of Operation Warp Speed and the vaccines' role in averting millions of deaths. Longlisted for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award and commended by Walter Isaacson as an "inspiring and informative page-turner," the book underscores mRNA's potential for future therapies while highlighting collaborative triumphs over bureaucratic and scientific obstacles.[29][30]

Co-authored books

Gregory Zuckerman co-authored two inspirational books with his sons, Elijah and Gabriel, focusing on athletes who triumphed over personal adversities during their youth. These works target middle-grade readers aged 8-12, emphasizing themes of resilience, perseverance, and the transformative power of sports to inspire young audiences facing their own challenges. Unlike Zuckerman's solo-authored financial biographies, which delve into adult worlds of investing and markets, these collaborative projects adopt an accessible, motivational tone suited for children and families, drawing on real-life stories to promote positive mindsets and endurance.[31][32][33] The first book, Rising Above: How 11 Athletes Overcame Challenges in Their Youth to Become Stars, published in May 2016 by Philomel Books, profiles male and female athletes who navigated obstacles such as poverty, physical disabilities, and health issues. Examples include LeBron James, who rose from economic hardship in Akron, Ohio, to NBA stardom; Tim Howard, the soccer goalkeeper who managed Tourette syndrome and OCD from childhood; and Dwyane Wade, who overcame an unstable family environment. The selection process began with an idea from one of Zuckerman's sons, leading the family to choose diverse stories of athletes whose early struggles mirrored common youth experiences, aiming to show that discipline and hope can lead to success. The book received positive reception for its engaging narratives and youth-oriented messaging, serving as a source of motivation for readers to persist through setbacks.[31][34][33][35] The follow-up, Rising Above: Inspiring Women in Sports, released in February 2018 by the same publisher, shifts focus to female athletes breaking gender barriers and personal hurdles. It features profiles of ten women across nine chapters, including the shared story of tennis icons Serena and Venus Williams, who defied racial and economic odds in Compton, California; Simone Biles, the gymnast who addressed family instability and mental health challenges; and Danica Patrick, the race car driver who challenged male-dominated motorsports from a young age. Other highlighted figures, such as Wilma Rudolph overcoming polio and racism, and Carli Lloyd battling self-doubt in soccer, underscore themes of empowerment and barrier-breaking. The family collaboration involved the sons contributing to research and writing, building on the success of the first book to address the underrepresentation of women in the original, with messaging tailored to encourage young girls in sports. This volume was praised for its empowering content and firsthand interviews, contributing to broader discussions on gender equity in athletics.[36][37][38] Together, these books reflect a family-driven project that Zuckerman credits to quality time with his sons, fostering their interest in storytelling while reaching young readers through relatable tales of athletic triumph.

Awards and honors

Gerald Loeb Awards

Gregory Zuckerman is a three-time recipient of the Gerald Loeb Award, the preeminent honor in business journalism established in 1957 by financier Gerald M. Loeb to recognize reporting that informs and safeguards investors and the public on financial matters.[39] The awards are selected annually through a rigorous process where journalists submit entries in various categories, evaluated by a panel of business leaders, academics, and media executives for depth, accuracy, and impact under categories like deadline writing and breaking news.[40] Zuckerman's wins, all during his tenure at The Wall Street Journal, underscore his expertise in dissecting high-stakes financial crises and market dynamics. In 2003, Zuckerman shared the Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline Writing with a team of Wall Street Journal reporters—Rebecca Blumenstein, Jared Sandberg, Shawn Young, Susan Pulliam, Deborah Solomon, and Carrick Mollenkamp—for their coverage titled "WorldCom's Whirlwind Demise."[41] The series chronicled the rapid unraveling of telecom giant WorldCom amid an $11 billion accounting fraud, including the arrest of CEO Bernie Ebbers on charges of securities fraud and conspiracy, providing critical insights into corporate governance failures during a wave of post-Enron scandals.[42][43] Judges praised the work for its speed and precision in deadline-driven reporting that illuminated the broader implications for investor trust in audited financial statements.[42] Zuckerman earned his second Loeb Award in 2007, again in the Deadline Writing category, alongside Ann Davis and Henny Sender, for "The Implosion of a Highflying Hedge Fund," detailing the collapse of Amaranth Advisors.[41] Their reporting exposed the hedge fund's catastrophic $6 billion loss from concentrated bets on natural gas futures, revealing vulnerabilities in unregulated derivatives trading that foreshadowed risks in the impending financial crisis.[44] This pre-crisis exposé highlighted how aggressive speculation could amplify market instability, earning acclaim for its timely analysis of hedge fund oversight gaps amid rising subprime concerns.[45] His third award came in 2015 for Breaking News, co-won with Kirsten Grind, for a series uncovering internal tensions at Pacific Investment Management Company (Pimco) that led to the abrupt departure of co-founder Bill Gross.[46] The investigative pieces detailed power struggles and leadership discord at the world's largest bond manager, which managed over $2 trillion in assets, shedding light on succession risks in opaque asset management firms.[2] Presented at a ceremony in New York City's Capitale on June 23, 2015, the honor boosted Zuckerman's profile as a leading voice on institutional trading and market intrigue.[47] These cumulative achievements affirm Zuckerman's role in advancing accountability in finance through exemplary journalism.[2] Zuckerman was a finalist for the Gerald Loeb Award twice more. In 2008, he was nominated alongside David Enrich for their coverage of the mortgage meltdown, titled "Mortgage Meltdown on Wall Street."[48] In 2011, he was a finalist for investigative news coverage of the Galleon Group insider trading scandal.[2]

Other recognitions

Zuckerman's book The Man Who Solved the Market was shortlisted for the 2019 Financial Times & McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award, recognizing its in-depth exploration of quantitative trading and Jim Simons' influence on Wall Street.[49] In journalism, Zuckerman contributed to a Wall Street Journal team that won a 2023 Society of American Business Editors and Writers (SABEW) Best in Business Award in the large division for their coverage of the FTX cryptocurrency exchange collapse in the Investing/Markets category, highlighting investigative coverage of industry dynamics and investment strategies.[50] Earlier, his book The Man Who Solved the Market was shortlisted for SABEW's 2020 Best in Business Book Awards, praised for its rigorous analysis of algorithmic finance.[51] In 2008, Zuckerman was part of a Wall Street Journal team that won the New York Press Club Journalism Award.[2] Zuckerman has been invited to prominent speaking engagements, including a 2021 talk at Yeshiva University's Sy Syms School of Business for honors students, where he discussed his career in financial journalism and book-writing insights.[10] He also appeared on the This Week in Virology (TWiV) podcast in November 2021 to promote A Shot to Save the World, sharing details on the COVID-19 vaccine development race and interviews with key scientists.[52] In 2025, he spoke at the Milken Institute Global Conference, underscoring his expertise in business and investing topics.[12] Among informal recognitions, Zuckerman received Chapman University's Presidential Medal for Distinguished Contributions to Business Journalism in 2014, awarded for his book The Frackers and its portrayal of the U.S. shale revolution.[53] He was profiled as a distinguished alumnus in Brandeis University's 2020 Global magazine feature, noting his Brandeis education and transition from finance to journalism.[8]

References

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