His signature Ask Ausiello column continued to be a must-read for TV fans and spoilerwhores alike, and his bi-weekly scoop series, Ausiello TV, was an instant smash according to him. In July 2008, after eight years at TV Guide, Michael jumped to Entertainment Weekly, where he penned a weekly column in the magazine as well as an award-winning blog on EW.com (both titled The Ausiello Files). Quickly realizing that they had a diva in the making star on the rise, Mike’s new bosses added to his responsibilities almost hourly: Before long, not only was he handling ’s news every day, editing the site’s Insiders and churning out one Ask Ausiello after another, but he was filing a weekly column for the magazine and writing the occasional feature and cover story. In no time, Mike was on a first-name basis with their publicists’ secretaries. (Actually, since between high school and college he lost enough weight to equal any Gilmore Girl, he might have just been hungry period.) So in 1999, when he was invited to come aboard at TV Guide, he leapt at the opportunity, looking back only long enough to make sure he hadn’t left any Diet Raspberry Snapple in his wake. He then was added to the staff of Update’s sister publication, Soaps In Depth.Īt In Depth, Mike interviewed all of daytime television’s greats, from Susan Lucci to Cynthia Watros to Vanessa Marcil.
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Next, he so thoroughly schmoozed impressed the editors of Soap Opera Update that they had no choice but to give him a freelancing gig. First he labored alongside John Tesh and Mary Hart (well, they were in the same building, at least) as a media relations coordinator for Entertainment Tonight. Upon graduating from USC, Mike gave up working as the TV critic/columnist for USC’s Daily Trojan newspaper and began riding the elevator to success. But neither of those hats fit him quite as well as that of editor. He tried playing an instrument, rocking out on the clarinet as a member of the University of Southern California’s iconic Trojan Marching Band. He tried acting, turning in a performance as Sandy in a Robert Gordon Elementary School production of Annie that was so convincing, he got fleas. Ewing, Flame Beaufort (if you have to ask, be ashamed… very ashamed).… These are the personalities that shaped his young mind into what it is today: a steel trap, slightly rusty, but overflowing with knowledge of the tube - some of it practical some… eh, not so much.įrom the beginning, Mike dreamed of making a living in the business by which he lived and died. A born couch potato, Michael Ausiello’s earliest memories are rectangular in shape, and, in fact, when he gets bored with one recollection, he reaches for the remote control and switches to another.