Susan Antilla

Bio:

Susan Antilla is an investigative journalist and author who writes about securities regulation, gender discrimination, stockbroker fraud and arbitration. She has written about business and finance for 40 years, authoring columns about Wall Street for The New York Times, Bloomberg, TheStreet and USA Today. Antilla is author of “Tales From the Boom-Boom Room: The Landmark Legal Battles That Exposed Wall Street’s Shocking Culture of Sexual Harassment.” The New York Observer called her book “a work of compelling Wall Street anthropology.”

Her articles have also appeared in The Nation, The Intercept, The American Prospect and CNN. She previously was a reporting fellow for Type Investigations, the investigative newsroom of Type Media Center.

She has appeared on PBS, CNN, CNBC and Bloomberg Television, and has been interviewed on dozens of radio programs about investor protection issues and sexual harassment.

She has won 3 “Best in Business” awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editors and Writers (SABEW) and received the Consumer Reporting award from the New York Press Club in 2016. In 2017, she received the Betty Furness Consumer Media Service Award from the Consumer Federation of America.

Antilla has a master’s degree in journalism from New York University and has taught journalism at New York University and Fairfield University.

Antilla tweets from @antillaview.

Sub-specialties:
Gender discrimination
Women on Wall Street
Investor protection
Mandatory arbitration
Finance and securities regulation