In 2009 Oppel began work as senior vice president/media for Public Strategies Inc. (PSI) of Austin, serving as a strategy adviser to national firms in finance, law, computers, airlines, energy and telecommunications. In 2010, PSI merged with Hill & Knowlton to become
Hill+Knowlton Strategies. Both firms were owned by the
WPP Group. He left H&K in 2012 to serve as a visiting professor of journalism at
Huston–Tillotson University, a historically black institution of 1,000 students in Austin. In 2014 he was named interim vice president for institutional advancement, and helped raise money and lead construction of the Sandra Joy Anderson Community Health and Wellness Center to provide medical care to students and low-income residents in neighborhoods surrounding the university. He left HT in early 2016. Oppel worked as senior vice president of Crosswind Media & Public Relations of Austin in 2016–2017, representing diverse clients in energy, infrastructure and healthcare, including trade associations before the
Texas Legislature. According to
Columbia Journalism Review, Bumble founder
Whitney Wolfe Herd would appear on the cover in exchange for a $25,000–30,000 social-media push by the dating company. Taliaferro denied there was any arrangement, saying the cover decision had been made before the social-media push was discussed. Taliaferro was hired after Hobby’s private equity firm, Genesis Park Partners, bought the magazine in October 2016. After Oppel served briefly as ombudsman, Hobby announced that Oppel would become interim editor-in-chief of the
Monthly on May 5, 2018. == Awards and achievements ==