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Monday, December 22, 2025

Crony Capitalism Lives On: New York Times’ Event Headlines Its Writers With Wall Street Honchos

Courtesy of Pam Martens.

Andrew Ross Sorkin, Creator of DealBook at the New York Times

In what can only be described as an unseemly marriage of the plundering herd on Wall Street and the so-called paper of record assigned with the arduous task of delivering unbiased investigative reports to the public, the New York Times has made the deeply unwise decision to hold “The Inaugural DealBook Conference.”   

The all-day conference to be held at the New York Times Center on December 12, headlines Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase – a company under serious Federal investigation on multiple fronts — and Lloyd Blankfein, Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs, a company which faces multiple lawsuits alleging investors were defrauded and which paid $550 million two years ago to settle SEC charges that it knowingly harmed its own clients.

The Times’ business writer, Andrew Ross Sorkin, appears to be the official host of the conference, delivering the opening welcome alongside Arthur Sulzberger, Jr., Chairman of the company and Publisher of the paper.  Sorkin will also interview Jamie Dimon on stage and deliver the closing remarks at the conference. 

Sorkin has appeared too chummy with Wall Street in the past.  His 2009 book party for “Too Big To Fail,” included Jamie Dimon and numerous other Wall Street luminaries and hedge fund managers.  One might well assume they did not come to celebrate being exposed as villains in the book. 

Sorkin’s official bio at The Times says he started DealBook in 2001 and is “an assistant editor of business and finance news, helping guide and shape the paper’s coverage.”  Guiding and shaping seems like the job of public relations flacks and not the job of a newspaper.  In yet another burst of synergy, Sorkin also co-anchors CNBC’s early morning business program, Squawk Box, where current and former Wall Street titans regularly deliver their prognostications, unimpeded by probing questions.  CNBC is one of the advertising sponsors of the upcoming DealBook conference. 

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