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Paley Center For Media

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26 reviews
1.0
26 Mar 2022

Will the Board Help Fix the Toxic Culture?

Anonymous employee
Recommend
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Pros

Made close friendships with wonderful people.

Cons

Close friendships came from bonding through trauma. Culture of fear with verbal abuse from CEO. Lack of decision-making on anything that doesn’t involve doing programs to please board members. Micromanaging on the silliest of details instead of presenting staff with any sort of vision or or mission. Everyone quits if they can. New team members these days quit after 6 months or less. Those left behind just can’t find employment elsewhere yet.

5.0
27 Apr 2025

Part-Time Guest Services Experience

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Pros

- Friendly staff - Fun to work with staff - Flexible Hours - Great Culture and Values - Exposure to Media - Cool events - Interesting Exhibits - Excellent CEO and Managers - People that work here care about you

Cons

- Some days are slow and can get boring.

1.0
15 Oct 2025

More Illusion Than Institution: The Paley Center Exposed

Anonymous employee
Recommend
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Pros

The vending machines usually worked.

Cons

This review of The Paley Center for Media is not about petty complaints—it’s about exposing the blatant misuse of money and power. At a time when the media industry is being dismantled at an alarming rate, Paley has squandered its chance to lead, instead clinging to outdated practices and misplaced priorities while failing to let true professionals restore an aging institution. PR is once again flooding Glassdoor with fabricated reviews. Here’s the reality. The Paley Center for Media has no commitment to providing meaningful opportunities for media professionals or preserving the legacy of media itself. It operates without vision, strategy, or a true product—just misused non-profit dollars and fabricated “emergencies” that vanish as quickly as they appear. For talented professionals from media, non-profits, and cultural institutions, it is a graveyard: people arrive with integrity and ideas, only to be drained, discarded, and gone within a year. To mask their revolving door, they hire almost exclusively through temp agencies (like myself), thinking this will keep the board from noticing just how quickly people quit—or are pushed out. It’s not strategy, it’s cowardice. And while they pretend this system gives them flexibility, in reality, it’s designed so they can fire people at will without accountability. The “lifers” who’ve clung to their jobs for decades survive not by skill but by throwing colleagues under the bus, lying outright, and protecting themselves in a crumbling institution. What’s left is a toxic cycle of fear, incompetence, and arrogance, dressed up as prestige. The Paley Center for Media operates with two faces: the public façade and the industry façade. On the public side, the Programming team works hard to deliver exhibits and panels in spite of the Chief Programming Officer’s chronic indecision. With no ample planning, Marketing is left scrambling, often with just days to promote programs that are supposed to draw “lines down the block.” It is not possible to draw 1000 museum attendees per day without a marketing plan, budget, or ample runway for promotion. Even the Education team, which delivers excellent programs, suffers from a lack of strategic promotion. Despite being the easiest area to fund, it is consistently overshadowed by leadership’s obsession with corporate sponsorships. At its core, Paley isn’t run like a nonprofit dedicated to media preservation or education—it’s run like a sales organization chasing quick dollars. Then there’s the industry side, where The Paley Center peddles an “exclusive” membership that might have been impressive back in the 1980s but is now laughably outdated. For nearly $4K a year, the big draw is a seat at a luncheon where a CEO recycles platitudes about their “secret to success.” Some may view this as a sponsorship opportunity, assuming that proximity alone closes deals. This is the Paley model in a nutshell: elitist luncheons, hollow programming, and no real value for today’s media professionals. When Media Council memberships inevitably declined, the CEO sounded yet another “emergency,” revealing just how disconnected leadership is from the realities of the industry. Media has been gutted—by the pandemic, strikes, and relentless disruption from new technology. Professionals are losing jobs daily, and those still employed live in constant fear of the HR email announcing their layoff. Even senior leaders, VPs and above, are not immune—though, in truth, the VP title itself has become obsolete in the modern, tech-driven world of streaming. On the development and fundraising side, the C-Suite leans almost entirely on networks and streamers to bankroll exhibits, instead of doing what most serious institutions do—building and leveraging an endowment. Rather than securing long-term stability, leadership continues to double down on outdated, transactional B2B plays. Instead of investing in an endowment to safeguard the institution’s future, they pour resources into antiquated “power lunches” for a shrinking circle of executives. Media has changed at an alarming rate since the pandemic, the writers’ strike, the introduction to new technology, and more. Media professionals do not have jobs, and the ones that have managed to hold on are waiting for the email from HR to tell them that they are being laid off. This includes VPs and above, though the VP title is a thing of the past and doesn’t belong in the new tech world of streaming. Internally, things are just as broken. IP infringement happens daily, and racist ideas and practices persist despite anti-discrimination policies leave the institution one misstep away from a costly lawsuit. When initiatives predictably collapse because of leadership failures, the solution was literally to remove the doors from offices so they could “see” staff working. Transparency, Paley-style: surveillance over strategy, control over competence. The CEO operates straight out of the Trump playbook—humiliating her employees in front of each other and gaslighting staff with the same hollow lines on repeat, like a broken record stuck on skip. Her salary is obscene given the Center’s budget, and her leadership style is rooted in outdated thinking with no understanding of how to run a nonprofit. Cultivating a healthy culture? Not even on her radar. Now, as word of Paley’s dysfunction finally reaches the board, her latest stunt is to force employees to “vote” that The Paley Center for Media is one of the best places to work (just like PR sends the staff 2 emails a day telling them to vote Paley for Best Museum and Best Children's Party Place for Bethpage's Best of the City). Manufactured accolades to mask a toxic reality—that’s her idea of leadership. The Paley Center for Media shows little genuine interest in preserving media or honoring the professionals who have devoted their lives to it. While the institution has potential, it will never realize it under a leadership team that lacks vision and any understanding of what makes for meaningful experiences. Paley is an aging institution destined to fade into irrelevance as the media landscape evolves. Constructive suggestions are treated as personal attacks, leaving no space for innovation, collaboration, or true leadership in serving media professionals. The irony is almost cinematic—someone should write a show about this place, because no one would believe it.

2.0
15 Jul 2024

STAY AWAY

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Pros

The idea of working with THE Paley Center for Media is incredible. One would think it's an incredible opportunity.

Cons

Working under the current CEO has been challenging. While adept at sales, her leadership style proves less effective for a CEO role. It seems unlikely she'll depart soon, given this is her most lucrative position yet. Entry-level employees find themselves subject to her unpredictable management style. Operations hinge on fulfilling her ever-changing whims. Resigning employees are even forbidden from discussing their departure publicly.

1.0
25 Dec 2023
Recommend
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Pros

Amazing, hardworking people with vision and promise come through these doors.

Cons

Throughout my tenure, I’ve witnessed a myriad of new hires come onboard, all of them bright-eyed, upbeat and passionate about the work they do. It doesn’t take long for that light to dim and eventually disappear completely- every time, like clockwork. Following their inevitable departure, another employee enters in their place, unaware of the cyclical, revolving-door nature of the place that will soon chew them up and spit them out. While working here, you can expect to be led by a trio of incompetent individuals with an abysmal lack of vision and foresight. These people will put no faith in you or your team to make the right decisions, only reprimand you for taking initiative and force you to conform to their backwards thinking. At every turn you will be sucked into management’s desperate and pathetic attempts to save a failing organization. Along the way, you will commonly encounter fits of screaming and crying from burnt out employees. One very quickly realizes at Paley that any value they bring goes unappreciated, any trace of creativity or ingenuity definitively stomped out. The CEO makes a point to remind employees at every opportunity that new ideas are encouraged, that our voices are heard- after all, we are a “family.” And yet, when brought to the table, every suggestion is met with resistance and skepticism. The culture of “this is how we’ve always done things” persists. Working at The Paley Center is akin to being in a toxic relationship- you are shamelessly manipulated and lied to, only to discover that YOU are in fact the the subject of management‘s mistrust. You are encouraged here put your reputation on the line for the sake of a company that continues to burn bridges, almost as if that is its primary objective. To all potential new hires, let me be clear: Paley will not advocate for you. You are dispensable, replaceable, and a means to an end. Paley is only concerned about its outward perception and money brought in to fund their subpar programs. Despite the glaring reality of its embarrassingly high turnover rate, Paley continues to treat its staff poorly, and will therefore continue to loose smart, competent employees. No matter your successes here, they will be diminished and overlooked. You will never be allowed a moment to revel in the wins, only made to feel like they weren’t enough. If and when things go awry, fingers will be pointed at you, as management continuously refuses to take accountability for their own shortcomings. Do not walk, run away from this place if you value your integrity and freedom from tyranny.

5.0
30 Apr 2026

A career from the front row of culture and media

Anonymous employee
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Pros

The Paley Center for Media is a most extraordinary place to work. It is a front-row seat to unfolding modern history, to all that is going on across the broad idea of media. The sheer scope of the overall offerings is impressive, whether you work there or you are a visitor. As a long-time employee, I have witnessed and been a small part of the continual evolution of the cultural importance of media, which for a career, is immensely satisfying. Importantly, the work is a communal effort at Paley. Every position, every skill is essential to the overall mission. It is a joy to work with such talented and committed people, another aspect that makes Paley a special place to work. A company needs clear vision at the very top to ensure the institution is positioned to weather economic turmoil and in fact grow. CEO & President Maureen Reidy has skillfully guided Paley to re-find its identity as a museum to ensure the public knows that we are open and welcoming to all.

Cons

In order to offer such a rich array of public and industry programs, it is a very fast-paced environment. It will not be a good fit for people who aren't energized by that pace of working.

1.0
26 Aug 2023

A Dismal Experience at the Paley Center for Media

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you're in the early stages of your tenure at the organization, one potential silver lining could be the prospect of a notably higher salary compared to those who have spent 20 years or more within the company. While this might offer some consolation, got me, it only aided to the disparities.

Cons

I regret to say that my time at the Paley Center for Media was nothing short of a nightmare. From the moment I stepped foot in the organization, it was clear that this was not a workplace that valued its employees or upheld any sense of ethics. Lack of Diversity and Promotion Discrepancies: One of the most glaring issues at the Paley Center was its complete lack of internal diversity. While the company paraded its commitment to inclusivity externally, it was shocking to witness the homogeneity within its own ranks. Even more distressing was the fact that individuals with diverse backgrounds were often overlooked for promotions, while external candidates were brought in to fill higher positions. This blatant hypocrisy revealed the company's insincerity in fostering a diverse and equitable work environment. Tyrannical CEO: The CEO of the Paley Center for Media displayed a complete disregard for the well-being of the employees. The concept of work-life balance was foreign to this individual, as they pushed their staff to the brink without any consideration for their personal lives. Their understanding of ethics was equally questionable, as decisions were often made solely to benefit the company's bottom line, regardless of the impact on employees or the industry. Complicit CFO: The CFO's involvement in financial perjury was deeply concerning. Instead of upholding financial integrity, they seemed to be actively aiding in dishonest financial practices. This not only put the company's reputation at risk but also placed employees in a precarious position, unaware of the true financial state of the organization. Underpaid and Threatened Staff: The staff at the Paley Center was consistently underpaid and overworked. Threats to job security were used as a means of coercion to extract more work from already exhausted employees. This toxic environment not only led to burnout but also fostered an atmosphere of fear and resentment. CPO's Ineffectiveness: The Chief People Officer's inability to advocate for herself or her team was disheartening. Instead of providing support and leadership, she came across as meek and fragile, unable to stand up to the CEO or address the pressing concerns of her staff. This lack of assertiveness trickled down, further exacerbating the already toxic work environment. HR as Minions: The HR department at the Paley Center seemed to operate as mindless minions, executing the company's demands without question. Instead of upholding employee rights and ensuring a safe work environment, they appeared to function more like soldiers blindly following orders in a war zone. In conclusion, my time at the Paley Center for Media was a nightmare I wouldn't wish upon anyone. The lack of internal diversity, the tyrannical CEO, the complicit CFO, the underpaid and threatened staff, the ineffectual CPO, and the submissive HR department collectively created a hostile work environment. If you value your well-being, ethics, and career advancement, I strongly advise against becoming a part of this deeply flawed organization.

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