Josh Tyrangiel

New York

Columnist covering artificial intelligence

Education: University of Pennsylvania, bachelor of arts in English and American History; Yale, master of American Studies

Josh Tyrangiel is The Post’s columnist covering artificial intelligence. He was previously the editor of Bloomberg Businessweek and chief content officer for Bloomberg Media. A 12-time Emmy and Peabody Award-winning producer, he created Vice News Tonight on HBO and has produced numerous feature-length documentaries for HBO, Netflix, and Apple TV Plus. As chief content officer of Bloomberg Media, he oversaw the company’s media output across five continents and was hailed for his innovative work as the editor of Bloomberg Businessweek, winning Advertising Age’s Editor of the Year award for his
Latest from Josh Tyrangiel

A new AI predicts when we’ll die. It says even more about how we live.

The research packs an existential punch.

January 15, 2024

Honestly, I love when AI hallucinates

Let me explain, once and for all, why your AI chatbot glitches and why you shouldn’t worry when it does.

December 27, 2023

What Sports Illustrated’s BotGate really means for journalism

While there’s lots of awful things happening in the journalism business, Sports Illustrated’s use of AI might not be one of them.

December 1, 2023

Sam Altman lost his job but not his place in AI history

We’ll find out soon enough what the ousted OpenAI CEO wants to do next.

November 18, 2023

AI is making the world’s biggest banks much smarter

Artificial intelligence could revolutionize banking by eliminating much of the risk.

November 17, 2023

Gina Raimondo is the secret MVP of Biden’s sweeping new executive order

Why the commerce secretary is the secret MVP of Biden’s sweeping new executive order on AI.

October 31, 2023

My dinner with AI

We’re wired to bond with pets and houseplants. So why would chatbots be any different?

October 17, 2023

What jobs will AI replace first? Josh Tyrangiel answered your questions.

AI columnist Josh Tyrangiel was online at noon on Oct. 12 to answer reader questions. Read the transcript.

October 10, 2023

Robots need people, too

How a Carnegie Mellon professor taught robots to ask for help, and what that means when humans ask for their help in return.

September 28, 2023