Danyel SmithWilson (born Danyel Smith; 1965) is an American magazine editor, journalist, and novelist .[1] Smith is the former and first African-American editor of Billboard[2] and Vibe magazine,[3] respectively. She is author of two novels and a history of African-American women in pop music.[4][5]
Early life
Smith was born in Oakland, California,[6] and began writing at a young age through keeping journals and creating a newspaper called the Weekly Arrow in the fourth grade.[6] Following a relocation to Los Angeles at the age of 10,[7] Smith graduated high school in 1983 at St. Mary's Academy in Inglewood, California. Upon graduation, Smith returned to the Bay area to attend the University of California, Berkeley.
Career
Smith started her career in 1989 as a freelance writer, columnist and critic in the San Francisco Bay Area at the San Francisco Bay Guardian[8] and the East Bay Express. From 1990 to 1991, she served as the music editor of SF Weekly. By 1992, Smith was freelancing as a reporter for Spin magazine, where she wrote a pop culture/music column called "Dreaming America".[9] In 1993, Smith moved to New York to become Rhythm and blues editor for Billboard magazine. At that time, she was also reviewing live shows and recorded music for The New York Times.[10]
In 1994, she became music editor of what was then Quincy Jones' new Vibe magazine. Two years later, Smith was awarded the National Arts Journalism Program fellowship at Northwestern UniversityMedill School of Journalism. After her year in Evanston, Illinois, she was named editor-in-chief of Vibe in 1997 where she was the first African-American, and first female editor.[11][12] While at Vibe, she also served as editorial director of its sister publication, Blaze, a monthly hip-hop magazine launched in 1998.[13] In 1999, she resigned and joined Time Inc. as an editor-at-large. There she consulted and wrote for magazines including Time, Entertainment Weekly and InStyle'[14] Throughout her career, Smith has served on a number of nominating committees, including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame[15] and National Magazine Awards.
In 2006, Smith returned to Vibe as chief content officer of Vibe Media Group, responsible for the digital as well as the paper platforms. Smith's cover profile of Keyshia Cole was featured in Da Capo Press's Best Music Writing 2008. After three years, Smith had a short stint at The Washington Post's African-American political site, The Root,[18] before returning to the music industry publication Billboard as editor. Smith remained at Billboard until 2012 when she resigned.[19] Smith was a 2014 John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University.[20] In addition to creating the "book-shaped magazine" HRDCVR, Smith and her husband hosted a podcast on iTunes called Relationship Goals, in which they talk about pop culture, hip-hop music and how they make their relationship work.[21] From 2016 to 2019, Smith was culture editor at ESPN's The Undefeated.[22] Smith regularly appears on network and cable television outlets to provide commentary on entertainment and pop culture topics.[23][24][25] and hosts the podcast Black Girl Songbook on Spotify.
Books
Smith began writing fiction in 1996 and authored her first novel, More Like Wrestling (Crown), in 2003.[7]More Like Wrestling, a coming-of-age story of two sisters growing up in Oakland, drew critical praise and was a San Francisco Chronicle bestseller.[26] The New York Times Book Review called it "lyrical and original",[27] while The Washington Post said that Smith's "prose sings with precision".[28] The title comes from a quote from philosopher Marcus Aurelius: "the art of living is more like wrestling than dancing."[29] In 2005, Smith published her second novel, Bliss, about a female record executive navigating personal and professional challenges in the late 90s. Smith's third book, Shine Bright: A Very Personal History of Black Women in Pop (Roc Lit 101/Random House), previously titled “She’s Every Woman: The Power of Black Women in Pop Music,"[30] is a combination of memoir and criticism that tells the "intimate history of Black women’s music as the foundational story of American pop."[31]
HRDCVR
In 2014, while at Stanford University for a Knight Journalism Fellowship, Smith launched HRDCVR with her husband, Elliott Wilson. HRDCVR is a bound, hardcover culture magazine "created by diverse teams for a diverse world."[32] Smith and Wilson crowdfunded the project, raising over $67,000 with support from over 500 "backers."[33] The bound magazine was printed, distributed to funders, and made available for purchase on the project website in October 2015. A one-time publication with a print edition of 2,000, HRDCVR includes articles on Drake, Jamal Crawford, and Sasha and Malia Obama, and features contributions from Janet Mock, Big Boi, Michael Arceneaux, Jeff Chang, Kid Fury, and Tinashe, among others.[34] In addition to the magazine, Smith and Wilson produced a weekly newsletter, HRDlist, that featured similar content.
Works
Novels
More Like Wrestling (2003)
Bliss (2005)
Non-Fiction
"Introduction" in Tupac Amaru Shakur: 1971–1996 (1998)
"Janet Jackson" in Trouble Girls: the Rolling Stone Book of Women in Rock edited by Barbara O'Dair (1997)
"Hit 'em up: on the life and death of Tupac Shakur" in Step into a World: a Global Anthology of the New Black Literature edited by Kevin Powell (2000)
"Foxy Brown: She Got Game" in Hip Hop Divas by Vibe Books (2001)
"Foxy Brown is the Illest" in And it Don't Stop: theBest American Hip-hop Journalism of the Last 25 Years edited by Raquel Cepeda (2004)
"Foxy" (audio recording) on The Moth: Audience Favorites Vol. 1 (Disc 2) compilation album (2004)
"Black Talk and Hot Sex: Why Street Lit Is Literature" in Total Chaos: the Art and Aesthetics of Hip-hop edited by Jeff Chang (2006)
"Janet Jackson: Janet's Back," "Sean 'Puffy' Combs:...and Still Champion," and "Wesley Snipes: The Trouble with Wesley" in The Vibe Q: Raw and Uncut edited by Rob Kenner and Rakia Clark (2007)
"Keyshia Cole: Hell's Angel" in Best Music Writing 2008 edited by Daphne Carr and Nelson George (2008)
"After 30 Years, I Finally Went to a Barry Manilow Concert" in Shake it Up: Great American Writing on Rock and Pop from Elvis to Jay Z edited by Kevin Dettmar and Jonathan Lethem (2017)
Her mother is of Filipino and African-American descent. She has one younger sister, Raquel. In addition, she has a younger stepsister, Nicole, and stepbrother Keith.[citation needed] Smith currently lives in Southern California with her husband, Elliott Wilson. They were married in Los Angeles in June 2005.[40][41]
^"Danyel Smith". Fresh, Bold, and So Def Tumblr. Hip-Hop Education Center at New York University. March 29, 2012. Archived from the original on August 12, 2014. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
^Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation; Evans, Suzan; Stein, Seymour; Santelli, Robert; Weinger, Harry; Bessman, Jim; Blavat, Jerry; Bashe, Patricia Romanowski; Puterbaugh, Parke (2000). Rock and Roll Hall of Fame fifteenth annual induction dinner. The Archive of Contemporary Music. [New York, N.Y. : Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation, Inc.]