Hooman Majd

Hooman Majd

Author / Journalist

Hooman Majd was born in Tehran, Iran in 1957, and lived abroad from infancy with his family who were in the diplomatic service. He attended boarding school in England and college in the United States, and stayed in the U.S. after the Islamic Revolution of 1979.

Majd had a long career in the entertainment business before devoting himself to writing and journalism full-time. He worked at Island Records and Polygram Records for many years, with a diverse group of artists, and was head of film and music at Palm Pictures, where he produced The Cup and James Toback's Black and White.

He has written for GQ, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The New York Observer, Interview, and Salon, and has been a regular contributor to The Huffington Post from its inception. A contributing editor at Interview magazine, he lives in New York City and travels regularly back to Iran.

What began as public outcry against Iran’s so-called morality police has snowballed into a mass movement targeting the very essence of the Islamic republic.
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Hooman Majd on Iran’s potential to go nuclear.
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The writer says a behind-the-scenes war with Iran is unlikely, though a high degree of espionage is not.
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The writer describes Iran’s relations with Syria, Egypt, and Iraq.
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The writer explains Iran’s long-time support for Hamas and Hezbollah.
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The writer disabuses us of a few misconceptions surrounding a shrewd president with strong support in the Arab world.
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After translating for former Iranian President Khatami, Ahmadinejad’s people shoehorned the writer in as interpreter at the UN.
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Hooman Majd reveals some facts about the Islamic republic that could surprise Americans.