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Eben Shapiro, who left the Wall Street Journal as it was cutting its lifestyle pages and compressing itself into a two-section paper, has landed at Time magazine.

He will become a deputy editor.

Shapiro starts on Jan. 3 and replaces the highly touted Radhika Jones, who jumped to the New York Times last month.

Shapiro will share deputy editor duties with Washington, DC-based Deputy Editor Michael Duffy, who at one time was in the running for the top editorial job at Time Inc. That job went to Alan Murray.

Shapiro was at the WSJ for the past 15 years, but had served a four-year WSJ stretch earlier in his career, sandwiched around stints as Newsweek business editor and at the Times.

The Time magazine announcement was made Tuesday by the title’s Editor-in-Chief Nancy Gibbs and Digital Editor Ed Felsenthal.

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