About Henry

Goldblatt hails from Sunnydale, also known as “The Hellmouth.” As a teenager, he discovered that he was the “chosen one,” selected to protect his town from vampires and demons. Wait, sorry—that’s the plot to Buffy The Vampire Slayer.

Let’s try again: Goldblatt, who hails from Lexington, Massachusetts (birthplace of the American Revolution; now home to numerous early-morning pancake breakfasts on Patriot’s Day), is an award-winning editor and content creator. He has been a pop culture fanatic ever since he was five years old and would stay home from school to watch The Price Is Right and reruns of All in the Family.

During his tenure as Editor in Chief of Entertainment Weekly, he oversaw a staff of 75 and created some of EW’s most beloved multi-platform franchises including “Hollywood’s Greatest Untold Stories”, “EW Cast Reunions” and the award-winning annual LGBTQ issue, which featured RuPaul, Neil Patrick Harris, Laverne Cox and many more. All of this editorial content was crafted with an eye toward engaging readers, generating mobile traffic and video streams, trending on Twitter and Instagram, and attracting advertisers and marketers who wanted to reach the brand’s highly-coveted audience of close to 30 million people. Under his leadership, Entertainment Weekly’s social media accounts, digital metrics and magazine newsstand sales all grew by double-digit percentages.

In his previous roles at Entertainment Weekly, he invented and wrote “The Bullseye”—a humorous compilation of the week’s hits and misses—which became the brand’s most popular franchise. In addition, he launched and ran EW Radio on SiriusXM, a 24/7 pop culture news station. Goldblatt is also a highly-sought after moderator for live events, and has interviewed everyone from Kerry Washington to Darren Criss.

Before that, Goldblatt spent seven years at Fortune magazine as a senior editor, a writer covering the media and telecommunications beats, and as a reporter for the brand’s signature Fortune 500 list.

Since he departed Entertainment Weekly in 2019, Goldblatt has served as a juror for The Peabody Awards, and his work has appeared in The New York Times and Watch! magazine. In his spare time, Goldblatt, a resident of West Hollywood, Calif., caters to his dog, Teddy, does pull-ups, and watches copious amounts of television.

Goldblatt is a graduate of the University of Michigan (Go Blue!) and has a master’s degree in journalism from Northwestern University.


About Henry

Goldblatt hails from Sunnydale, also known as “The Hellmouth.” As a teenager, he discovered that he was the “chosen one,” selected to protect his town from vampires and demons. Wait, sorry—that’s the plot to Buffy The Vampire Slayer.

Let’s try again: Goldblatt, who hails from Lexington, Massachusetts (birthplace of the American Revolution; now home to numerous early-morning pancake breakfasts on Patriot’s Day), is an award-winning editor and content creator. He has been a pop culture fanatic ever since he was five years old and would stay home from school to watch The Price Is Right and reruns of All in the Family.

During his tenure as Editor in Chief of Entertainment Weekly, he oversaw a staff of 75 and created some of EW’s most beloved multi-platform franchises including “Hollywood’s Greatest Untold Stories”, “EW Cast Reunions” and the award-winning annual LGBTQ issue, which featured RuPaul, Neil Patrick Harris, Laverne Cox and many more. All of this editorial content was crafted with an eye toward engaging readers, generating mobile traffic and video streams, trending on Twitter and Instagram, and attracting advertisers and marketers who wanted to reach the brand’s highly-coveted audience of close to 30 million people. Under his leadership, Entertainment Weekly’s social media accounts, digital metrics and magazine newsstand sales all grew by double-digit percentages.

In his previous roles at Entertainment Weekly, he invented and wrote “The Bullseye”—a humorous compilation of the week’s hits and misses—which became the brand’s most popular franchise. In addition, he launched and ran EW Radio on SiriusXM, a 24/7 pop culture news station. Goldblatt is also a highly-sought after moderator for live events, and has interviewed everyone from Kerry Washington to Darren Criss.

Before that, Goldblatt spent seven years at Fortune magazine as a senior editor, a writer covering the media and telecommunications beats, and as a reporter for the brand’s signature Fortune 500 list.

Since he departed Entertainment Weekly in 2019, Goldblatt has served as a juror for The Peabody Awards, and his work has appeared in The New York Times and Watch! magazine. In his spare time, Goldblatt, a resident of West Hollywood, Calif., caters to his dog, Teddy, does pull-ups, and watches copious amounts of television.

Goldblatt is a graduate of the University of Michigan (Go Blue!) and has a master’s degree in journalism from Northwestern University.


About Henry

Goldblatt hails from Sunnydale, also known as “The Hellmouth.” As a teenager, he discovered that he was the “chosen one,” selected to protect his town from vampires and demons. Wait, sorry—that’s the plot to Buffy The Vampire Slayer.

Let’s try again: Goldblatt, who hails from Lexington, Massachusetts (birthplace of the American Revolution; now home to numerous early-morning pancake breakfasts on Patriot’s Day), is an award-winning editor and content creator. He has been a pop culture fanatic ever since he was five years old and would stay home from school to watch The Price Is Right and reruns of All in the Family.

During his tenure as Editor in Chief of Entertainment Weekly, he oversaw a staff of 75 and created some of EW’s most beloved multi-platform franchises including “Hollywood’s Greatest Untold Stories”, “EW Cast Reunions” and the award-winning annual LGBTQ issue, which featured RuPaul, Neil Patrick Harris, Laverne Cox and many more. All of this editorial content was crafted with an eye toward engaging readers, generating mobile traffic and video streams, trending on Twitter and Instagram, and attracting advertisers and marketers who wanted to reach the brand’s highly-coveted audience of close to 30 million people. Under his leadership, Entertainment Weekly’s social media accounts, digital metrics and magazine newsstand sales all grew by double-digit percentages.

In his previous roles at Entertainment Weekly, he invented and wrote “The Bullseye”—a humorous compilation of the week’s hits and misses—which became the brand’s most popular franchise. In addition, he launched and ran EW Radio on SiriusXM, a 24/7 pop culture news station. Goldblatt is also a highly-sought after moderator for live events, and has interviewed everyone from Kerry Washington to Darren Criss.

Before that, Goldblatt spent seven years at Fortune magazine as a senior editor, a writer covering the media and telecommunications beats, and as a reporter for the brand’s signature Fortune 500 list.

Since he departed Entertainment Weekly in 2019, Goldblatt has served as a juror for The Peabody Awards, and his work has appeared in The New York Times and Watch! magazine. In his spare time, Goldblatt, a resident of West Hollywood, Calif., caters to his dog, Teddy, does pull-ups, and watches copious amounts of television.

Goldblatt is a graduate of the University of Michigan (Go Blue!) and has a master’s degree in journalism from Northwestern University.