The ‘Financial Times’ Editor Brooke Masters

I Hate Squishy Facts, but I Loved the Martha Stewart Trial

Brooke Masters is the companies editor of the Financial Times, based in London. She oversees global coverage of corporate news and writes a weekly column. A native New Yorker, Masters is the author of Spoiling for a Fight: The Rise of Eliot Spitzer. Before participating in a Zócalo/Smithsonian “What It Means to Be American” panel in London on whether America is still a British colony, Masters visited the green room to talk about her favorite place to take out-of-town guests, the most important year of her life, and her devotion to the New York Mets.

Q:

What profession would you like to practice in your next life?


A:

I’d like to be a fashion designer.


Q:

What’s your favorite song about New York?


A:

This is pathetic, but the song they used to play on Mets advertisements. [Starts singing.] “East side, west side … ” I was an absolutely fanatic Mets fan.


Q:

What word or phrase do you use most often?


A:

They come in phases. I get grief from people on the [editing] desk for using “squishy.” I don’t like stories that are squishy or facts that are squishy.


Q:

What would you order for your last meal?


A:

That’s a tough one. I love food. Probably steak and lobster and champagne.


Q:

Where do you take out-of-town guests when they come to London?


A:

Beyond the obvious like the Tower of London, places where they might not go—like Borough Market, which is a food market. You get a real international sense of London there.


Q:

Who is your favorite American author of the last century?


A:

Zora Neale Hurston.


Q:

What was the most important year of your life?


A:

Probably 1992. I met my husband, got my first really big promotion, and decided not to go to law school.


Q:

Of all the white-collar crime cases you’ve covered in your career, which one was the most fun to cover and why?


A:

Martha Stewart. It had everything—hundreds of groupies, Martha’s clothing to analyze. It was intellectually interesting because whether they were going to get a conviction was not clear. There was cotton candy and meat. It was perfect.


Q:

What surprises you most about your life right now?


A:

That I’m about to become a British citizen because of the referendum on leaving the EU. I think it’s a terrible idea and I want to vote against it.


Q:

What does it mean to be American?


A:

I think it means that we try to be better. We have higher aspirations for the world, for our country. We’ve been given so much, and we had a continent that wasn’t empty, but was fertile and wonderful. We built institutions that were great. We owe it to our grandparents and children to be something special, to be better.