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Edmund Lee has been a journalist for two decades. He got his start at the Village Voice, where he wrote about everything from Asian gangsters to amateur arm wrestling tourneys.

Before joining Recode, he was the media reporter for Bloomberg News and Businessweek magazine, and he occasionally jabbered on Bloomberg TV.

He has worked for, or contributed to, various newsrooms and websites since then, including the New York Times, Portfolio magazine, Women's Wear Daily, W magazine, Vibe and Advertising Age.

Based on his reporting at the Voice, he wrote the script for the independent feature "West 32nd," which debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2007.

Ed lives in Brooklyn with his wife and daughter.


Ethics Statement

Here's a statement of my ethics and coverage policies. It's more than most of you are likely to want to know, but in the age of suspicion of the media, I'm laying it all out. Also, it's good to be a skeptical reader.

I have investments in a 401K and an IRA, both of which are managed as typical blind trusts over which I make no investment decisions. I'm not directly invested in any technology or media funds.

I don't accept any gifts from the companies I edit or write about, nor do I accept paid consulting work from such companies or industry groups.

My wife, Elizabeth Chung, is a retail consultant who works for various e-commerce startups. She has a small amount of equity in some of these companies. Nonetheless, her employment won't influence our coverage in any way and I will disclose any potential conflicts.

Recode is owned wholly by Vox Media, a company with an audience of 170 million worldwide. It has eight distinct media brands: The Verge (Technology and Culture), Vox.com (News), SB Nation (Sports), Polygon (Gaming), Eater (Food and Nightlife), Racked (Shopping, Beauty and Fashion), Curbed (Real Estate and Home), as well as Recode (Tech Business).

Vox Media has a number of investors, including, but not limited to, Comcast Ventures and NBCUniversal, both of which are owned by Comcast Corporation.

My posts have total editorial independence from these investors, even when they touch on products and services these companies produce, compete with, or invest in. The same goes for all content on Recode and at our conferences. No one in this group has influence on or access to the posts we publish. We will also add a direct link to this disclosure when we write directly about the companies.

Here’s what you need to know about the U.S. lawsuit against the AT&T-Time Warner merger

The Trump administration has sued to block AT&T’s $85 billion takeover of CNN-owned Time Warner. The trial starts March 21. Here’s what you need to know.

The media merger wars are on. Next up: Comcast’s bid to undercut Disney’s purchase of Fox.

Comcast bid $31 billion for European pay TV service Sky, besting Rupert Murdoch’s bid.

Hulu is going to be big and profitable, according to Disney’s chief strategy officer

Kevin Mayer says Disney will invest in Hulu once it takes over.

Janice Min was approached to edit the Los Angeles Times

The former editor of the Hollywood Reporter spoke to us at the Code Media conference.

This is what it’s like to have dinner with Steve Bannon, Roger Ailes and Michael Wolff

Wolff’s book "Fire and Fury" detailed the dinner, but Min was also there. Here’s her take.

BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti loves BuzzFeed News and loves that it’s part of BuzzFeed

Remember when you read about the possibility of BuzzFeed News being spun off?

BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti says Facebook should share revenue as well as traffic

If Facebook wants to influence what shows up in its News Feed, it should pay publishers.

The New York Times digital paywall business is growing as fast as Facebook and faster than Google

Times’ online subscription sales jumped 46 percent in 2017 to $340 million. Digital ad sales rose 14 percent to $238 million.

Amazon should buy CBS. Here’s why it would be a smart deal.

It’s about the NFL. Also, why tech should buy media.

Disney is buying 21st Century Fox businesses in a big bet on streaming over TV

Price tag: $52.4 billion. With debt: $66.1 billion. All stock deal.

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