Nancy Jean Dubuc (born December 10, 1968[1]) is an American businesswoman who served as chief executive officer of the American-Canadian media company Vice Media.
Early life and education
Dubuc is the daughter of Carol D. Smith and Robert H. Dubuc Jr.[2] Her parents later separated and remarried, giving Dubuc step-parents. She was raised in Bristol, Rhode Island,[3] graduated from Lincoln School in 1987 and Boston University in 1991 after rowing on the school's Division I crew team. Her mother ran one of Rhode Island's most successful catering companies. Calling her "a hard-driving, entrepreneurial woman",[4][1] Dubuc credits the "directness" and strong opinions of her mother as inspiring her leadership style.[3] In 1997, she married Michael Rashid Kizilbash, an Iranian-American copyeditor, in a Roman Catholic ceremony in Rhode Island.[2] She has a son and a daughter.[5]
Career
Dubuc briefly worked in NBC's publicity department before leaving to become a producer at The Christian Science Monitor and the Boston television station WGBH-TV. She later joined the History Channel and became the channel's director of historical programming.[4] There, she convinced the network to adapt an episode of Modern Marvels into an entire series called Ice Road Truckers, which became History's then-highest-rated program.[4][5]
She was appointed president and chief executive officer of the American media company A&E Networks in June 2013.[6][7] Part of her role involved overseeing the cable networks History, A&E, and Lifetime. Under her leadership, the company delved into offering reality shows such as Duck Dynasty and other shows garnered large ratings.[5] In 2013, Bloomberg called her "the show picker with the hottest hand in cable television".[8] That year, Fortune included her on its list of 50 Most Powerful Women in Business.[9] She has also been named to The Hollywood Reporter's annual Power 100 list four times, from 2011 to 2014.[10][11][12][13]
In March 2018, Dubuc was named the new CEO of Vice Media one day after officially announcing her departure from A&E Networks. She succeeded Vice co-founder Shane Smith, who transitioned into the role of executive chairman.[16] Dubuc left her position at A&E on April 16, 2018.[17] She left Vice on February 24, 2023, as the company faced problems with turning an annual profit and finding a buyer.[18]