Roger D. Hodge (born 1967 in Del Rio, Texas, U.S.) is Deputy Editor at The Intercept.
He began graduate work at the New School for Social Research and completed a master's degree in philosophy, but joined Harper's before finishing his dissertation.
In December 2000, Hodge orchestrated the relaunch of the magazine's website, Harpers.org, and created the popular "Weekly Review",[3] a deadpan satire of the twenty-four-hour news cycle.
[5] His writings there include "Blood and Time: Cormac McCarthy and the Twilight of the West", which appeared in February 2006 and was a National Magazine Award finalist for Reviews and Criticism.
[7] That article presents evidence from four named U.S. Military Intelligence guards, including a decorated sergeant, that three Guantánamo Bay prisoners who allegedly committed suicide in 2006 were most likely killed in a secret "black site" known to American soldiers as "Camp No".