employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Entertainment Weekly

Is this your company?

Entertainment Weekly reviews

2.9

52% would recommend to a friend

(14 total reviews)

24% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

14 reviews
2.0
Mar 18, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great brand that was truly influential in shaping modern entertainment journalism. Some truly great writers and editors. Great access to networks and studios.

Cons

The print magazine keeps getting thinner and thinner. But there's no focus on improving the website, or integrating the magazine staff into its operation. Some of the most talented writers and editors have left in recent years -- either through downsizing or through the bizarro move to Los Angeles (which seems to be just a mass layoff that cut the already thin staff to the bone). The top editor also plays favorites, mostly gay men who often are allowed to coast on their status while others are expected to do most of the work.

5.0
Mar 17, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

extremely immersive, you'll learn a lot, they really take your interests into consideration when assigning you work to do

Cons

no permanent position guaranteed after

2.0
May 31, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Getting to cover the biggest and best in entertainment with relatively excellent access. EW used to mean something in this business, and though it's lost a lot of its former cache, it still has the power to open doors. The people there are wonderful. They care deeply about their work, about trying to keep EW from devolving into total slop, and about each other. It was one of the more humane places I've had the pleasure to work. And every team member goes above and beyond to deliver the highest quality work.

Cons

Over the course of my time at EW, it became a shriveled, husk of what it once was. It was the dream for many reporters for a time, but now, despite the best efforts of those who still work there to fight it, it's become more like TMZ than what it used to stand for. Clicks and traffic are privileged over all else (not that it's much different elsewhere); stories are determined by clicks rather than what actually constitutes real news or the type of reporting that once made EW a singular place. The amount of reporting on "The View" on a daily basis is, frankly, an embarrassment. And corporate continues to chip away at what made the brand special, eliminating set visits, festival coverage, criticism, and anything that made EW worthwhile. Neil Vogel, the CEO, is a frat bro doofus who lies through his teeth in every all-hands meeting. Tbh, I'll be shocked if EW still exists by 2027, as it seems like they do a new round of layoffs every time they finish the previous room of severance payouts. Seems like they're just spreading out how many people they have to pay severance when. There's also a real reluctance from management to acknowledge the reality of what's happening -- and do anything to try to fight People Inc's gutting of the brand.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 14 Reviews

Glassdoor has 21 Entertainment Weekly reviews submitted anonymously by Entertainment Weekly employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Entertainment Weekly is right for you.