Gawker, Filing for Bankruptcy After Hulk Hogan Suit, Is for Sale

Disir

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Gawker Media, the irreverent company that pioneered the wry tone and take-no-prisoners approach that came to embody a certain style of web journalism, put itself up for sale on Friday in an acknowledgment that its future as an independent news organization was in doubt.

Gawker said it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and would conduct a sale through an auction. The company is under significant financial pressure from a $140 million legal judgment in an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit by the former wrestler Hulk Hogan and facing a determined foe in the Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel, who is funding legal cases against it.

Ziff Davis, a digital media company, has submitted an opening bid, which a person briefed on Gawker’s plans said was in the range of $90 million to $100 million. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sale process. Gawker expects a sale to close by the end of the summer.

But even as Gawker took stock of its next steps, it remained, in typical fashion, defiant.

“Even with his billions, Thiel will not silence our writers,” Nick Denton, Gawker’s founder and chief executive, said on Twitter. “Our sites will thrive — under new ownership — and we’ll win in court.” (Mr. Denton, through a spokesman, declined further comment.)

Since its founding in 2002, Gawker has espoused a conversational tone that came to be mimicked across the internet and on social platforms like Twitter. Gawker and its affiliated sites — including the sports-focused Deadspin and Jezebel, which is aimed at women — have relentlessly and gleefully chronicled the lives of the powerful, and often delivered attention-grabbing, exclusive stories, some of them too over-the-edge for other publications. The company was also an incubator of talent: Employees went on to found websites like The Awl and work at publications like The New Yorker and Time.

Gawker also had many detractors, who said it often went too far and published items with little news value that aimed to embarrass individuals. But over the last year Gawker.com has been going through something of a cultural transformation. Mr. Denton has vowed to make the site nicer and Gawker has shifted to politics and away from coverage of the New York media world and celebrity gossip.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/11/business/media/gawker-bankruptcy-sale.html

I was not a fan of Gawker for the most part.
 
I don't think Hogan was outed as gay. He had sex with a woman and was videotaped by the husband who turned it over to Gawker. Peter Thiel, a whackadoo all by himself, helped Hogan sue the bejeezes out of Gawker. Hogan was set up. I'm not a fan of his by any means but he did get jacked around.
 
Oh........another hypocritical billionaire Libertarian with an axe to grind? That makes much more sense. Thanks.

Yeah, Hogan is stupid.
 
Gawker closin' up shop after losin' lawsuit...
icon16.gif

Gossip website Gawker to shut down after losing Hulk Hogan sex tape case
Friday 19th August, 2016 - Gawker.com, the website that broke new ground with its gossipy, no-holds-barred coverage of media, culture and politics, is to shut down after 14 years.
Founder Nick Denton reportedly told staffers on Thursday afternoon that Gawker will come to an end next week. Spanish-language broadcaster Univision is buying the site's parent company, Gawker Media, for 135 million US dollars (£102 million), after Gawker lost a major invasion-of-privacy case brought by the former pro wrestler Hulk Hogan. Gawker had published a video of him having sex with a friend's wife. A Florida court awarded Mr Hogan, whose lawsuit was secretly backed by an aggrieved Silicon Valley billionaire, 140 million dollars (£106 million) in damages.

Gawker Media went into bankruptcy protection after the verdict, and a judge has to approve the sale at a hearing on Thursday. "The real shame is that Gawker gave Hogan a sledgehammer with which (to) pulverise it in state court," New York University journalism professor Adam Penenberg tweeted. "If you want to ascribe blame, blame Denton." Other Gawker Media blogs may live on. The company currently publishes seven sites in addition to Gawker.com, including the feminist-focused Jezebel, the tech site Gizmodo and the sports site Deadspin. Univision wants those properties to help build a more youthful audience than that commanded by broadcast TV.

PANews_P-aed54a0b-3ced-4cf3-9607-6e63f7e19884_I1.jpg

Gawker founder Nick Denton walks out of a court house in Florida​

But Gawker's real enemy, it turns out, was not Mr Hogan so much as Peter Thiel, a PayPal founder and early investor in Facebook who a Gawker site had outed as gay in 2007. Mr Thiel's vendetta against Gawker raised concerns about wealthy people covertly working to undermine media companies they do not like. Gawker's snarky and frequently vulgar style was influential throughout publishing. The site became a breeding ground for journalists, some of whom went on to jobs at the sort of establishment media outposts Gawker itself frequently mocked. "I think in a lot of ways Gawker has helped to define the voice of the internet," said Josh Benton, the director of the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University, who said he has been a daily reader "as long as there's been a Gawker".

The site was initially a breezy, insider-y chronicler of the media that made it a must-read for many in the industry. In later years it branched out into salacious stories of all kinds, but still enjoyed needling establishment figures in media and technology. Mr Denton, an outspoken a former Financial Times journalist, for now does not plan on going to Univision. He also declared personal bankruptcy as a result of the Hogan case.

Gossip website Gawker to shut down after losing Hulk Hogan sex tape case - Independent.ie
 
Gawker closin' up shop after losin' lawsuit...
icon16.gif

Gossip website Gawker to shut down after losing Hulk Hogan sex tape case
Friday 19th August, 2016 - Gawker.com, the website that broke new ground with its gossipy, no-holds-barred coverage of media, culture and politics, is to shut down after 14 years.
Founder Nick Denton reportedly told staffers on Thursday afternoon that Gawker will come to an end next week. Spanish-language broadcaster Univision is buying the site's parent company, Gawker Media, for 135 million US dollars (£102 million), after Gawker lost a major invasion-of-privacy case brought by the former pro wrestler Hulk Hogan. Gawker had published a video of him having sex with a friend's wife. A Florida court awarded Mr Hogan, whose lawsuit was secretly backed by an aggrieved Silicon Valley billionaire, 140 million dollars (£106 million) in damages.

Gawker Media went into bankruptcy protection after the verdict, and a judge has to approve the sale at a hearing on Thursday. "The real shame is that Gawker gave Hogan a sledgehammer with which (to) pulverise it in state court," New York University journalism professor Adam Penenberg tweeted. "If you want to ascribe blame, blame Denton." Other Gawker Media blogs may live on. The company currently publishes seven sites in addition to Gawker.com, including the feminist-focused Jezebel, the tech site Gizmodo and the sports site Deadspin. Univision wants those properties to help build a more youthful audience than that commanded by broadcast TV.

PANews_P-aed54a0b-3ced-4cf3-9607-6e63f7e19884_I1.jpg

Gawker founder Nick Denton walks out of a court house in Florida​

But Gawker's real enemy, it turns out, was not Mr Hogan so much as Peter Thiel, a PayPal founder and early investor in Facebook who a Gawker site had outed as gay in 2007. Mr Thiel's vendetta against Gawker raised concerns about wealthy people covertly working to undermine media companies they do not like. Gawker's snarky and frequently vulgar style was influential throughout publishing. The site became a breeding ground for journalists, some of whom went on to jobs at the sort of establishment media outposts Gawker itself frequently mocked. "I think in a lot of ways Gawker has helped to define the voice of the internet," said Josh Benton, the director of the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University, who said he has been a daily reader "as long as there's been a Gawker".

The site was initially a breezy, insider-y chronicler of the media that made it a must-read for many in the industry. In later years it branched out into salacious stories of all kinds, but still enjoyed needling establishment figures in media and technology. Mr Denton, an outspoken a former Financial Times journalist, for now does not plan on going to Univision. He also declared personal bankruptcy as a result of the Hogan case.

Gossip website Gawker to shut down after losing Hulk Hogan sex tape case - Independent.ie

Yep. They tried too late in the game to clean up.
 

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