Christian Stone
Follow Us
Chris Stone is the former Los Angeles Times deputy managing editor for new initiatives and vice president of L.A. Times Studios.
In his role, Stone guided the launch of new products and initiatives and provided leadership across the studios portfolio: The Times’ news video group, Originals; Studio Production; Intellectual Property Development; Audio; and the Los Angeles Times Book Club. He also will drove efforts to expand The Times’ journalism across forms and approaches, serving as a liaison among the various teams in The Times’ newsroom and other departments in the company and with external partners.
Stone joined the company in 2020 as executive sports editor. During his time overseeing the Sports section, he led a major expansion of its digital-first focus. In addition, the Sports team won consecutive “Grand Slams” in the Associated Press Sports Editor awards and published successful initiatives, such as the award-winning docuseries “Fernandomania @ 40” and extensive coverage of Super Bowl LVI. Stone also worked with The Times’ audio and entertainment departments to help bring “Binge Sesh,” a 10-episode companion podcast to HBO’s “Winning Time,” to life. He also helped launch The Times’ publishing partnership with Meredith Premium Publishing, which has produced more than 12 bookazines to date.
Previously, Stone worked for Sports Illustrated for 27 years, including the last four as editor in chief. He is a graduate of Tufts University and the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism.
Latest From This Author
If Super Bowl LVIII goes to overtime, it will be only the second time in history that the game has been tied at the end of regulation.
The earthquake was reported Sunday afternoon near Ojai and was felt across Southern California as Hilary pounds the region with rain.
Nearly two-thirds of NCAA men’s basketball champions have been a top-three seed. But one program has given reason for Cinderellas to dream big.
March Madness is famously about little schools dreaming big, but championship odds are squarely on the side of No. 1 seeds.
How likely are any of this year’s No. 16 seeds to make NCAA tournament history and knock off a No. 1 seed? Not likely, not impossible.
If Super Bowl LVII goes to overtime, it will be only the second time in history that the game has been tied at the end of regulation.
Grant Wahl lifted, popularized and pioneered soccer coverage in the U.S. Above all, he shared that giant, adventurous life with colleagues and strangers alike.
Nearly two-thirds of NCAA men’s basketball champions have been a top-three seed. But one program has given reason for Cinderellas to dream big.
How likely are No. 16 seeds Georgia State, Wright State, Bryant, Texas Southern, Texas A&M-CC or Norfolk State to make NCAA tournament history? Not likely, not impossible.
March Madness is famously about little schools dreaming big, but championship odds are squarely on the side of No. 1 seeds.