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Deadspin is Dead After Refusing To 'Stick To Sports' (axios.com) 251

Everyone on Deadspin's staff -- nearly 20 writers and editors -- resigned this week after the site's interim editor-in-chief, Barry Petchesky, was fired for refusing to "stick to sports." Axios reports: In the last month alone, two prominent American sports publications have been gutted and look destined to become shells of their former selves. A few weeks ago, Sports Illustrated's new owners laid off half the newsroom -- the first step in their plan to turn it into a rickety old content mill staffed by contributors making as little as $25,000 a year. Deadspin was founded as a sports blog in 2005 and was originally part of Gawker Media, which was sued out of existence thanks to a lawsuit brought by Hulk Hogan (and funded by Peter Thiel). After bouncing between a few owners, Deadspin and its sibling sites like Gizmodo, Jezebel and The Onion were acquired by private equity firm Great Hill Partners earlier this year. Since then, new ownership has tried to change the tone of the site on the fly, urging writers to avoid hot-button issues or polarized political topics. The New York Times explains the tension between the management and editorial staff: While largely focused on sports, Deadspin for years had delved into a broad range of topics in a voice that was sometimes rude, often funny and always conversational. On Tuesday, the site's top editor, Barry Petchesky, was fired after refusing to go along with the order. The departures shocked fans of the site, which put a new spin on sports coverage for a generation of digital natives. But they were the result of a long buildup of resentment between the journalists and their new bosses, according to interviews with 13 current and former employees of Deadspin and G/O Media.

The main topic of discussion at the Wednesday meeting was the stick-to-sports memo, which was signed by Paul Maidment, the editorial director of G/O Media, the company that became the owner of Deadspin and sibling sites like Jezebel and Gizmodo six months ago. Stories that showed the intersection of sports and other topics were fair game, Mr. Maidment wrote in the memo. He said at the meeting that he had enjoyed a recent post about President Trump getting booed at a World Series game. But purely non-sports content was forbidden. Deadspin writers and editors considered that to be meddling.

[...] G/O Media installed Jim Spanfeller, a digital media executive who had previously run Forbes.com, as its head. Mr. Spanfeller promptly got rid of some top editors and made Mr. Maidment the editorial director. Signs of tensions between the irreverent journalists and the management team came quickly. They were not helped by an Aug. 2 Deadspin article whose reporting was critical of G/O Media, Mr. Spanfeller and his executive team. The piece took issue with their "lack of knowledge about" the sites now in their portfolio and "their seeming unwillingness or inability to get up to speed." A few weeks later, Deadspin's top editor, Megan Greenwell, resigned, saying in a farewell post that her job had become untenable, given management's demands.The next major event at G/O Media occurred on Oct. 10, with the shuttering of its politics site, Splinter.
Further reading: Thank You (Deadspin); The Mavening of Sportswriting (The Ringer).

Bernie Sanders said in a statement Thursday evening, "I stand with the former Deadspin workers who decided not to bow to the greed of private equity vultures like Jim Spanfeller. This is the kind of greed that is destroying journalism across the country, and together we are going to take them on."
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Deadspin is Dead After Refusing To 'Stick To Sports'

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  • by Some Guy I Dont Know ( 6200212 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:25PM (#59369902)

    Who would have ever thought that people didn't want to go to a sports website to read about non-sports?
    And that when new management came in to make the business successful, they'd stop to practices that were driving away readers?
    . .. ...
    Must be racism!

    • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:38PM (#59369946) Journal

      Who would have thought that a publisher would care what the writers write about, as long as it is bringing readers and ad impressions?

      • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:49PM (#59369978) Homepage Journal

        That's just it, they don't really care. They posted the ad impressions they got. Turns out, most of the people reading a sports website only read the stories that were about sports and not the stories about politics.

        So management told their writers to stop screwing around and stick to the content people actually read. And instead, everyone quit.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          How could this be modded troll?? It's exactly what happened!

          Broken-ass /. mod system for sure.
          • by jwhyche ( 6192 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:33PM (#59370114) Homepage

            It isn't a troll. Just some idiot with modpoints didn't like to hear the truth. This is the exact reason that I'm telling people to use the abuse flag to file a report against the mod trolls.

            • You'll really get mad if you go to a wikipedia page thats controversial. Its nothing more than groups of people that email each other to fight over ambiguous rules. So you have pages that wont make a rich powerful person be portrayed in a negative light. Given that wikipedia is a huge source of information to me thats a much bigger issue than slashdot comment mods which is also done via crowd.
        • by fibonacci8 ( 260615 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:21PM (#59370062)
          Except you've got it entirely backward, the most visited stories were only tangentially sports related. The draw to deadspin was amusing incidents that were sports-adjacent.
          Citations:
          Back in 2010 https://deadspin.com/the-top-1... [deadspin.com]
          And again in 2017 https://deadspin.com/the-100-m... [deadspin.com]
          And 2018, since 2019 isn't going to get written now https://deadspin.com/deadspins... [deadspin.com]
          Going strictly sports would likely have killed viewership.
          • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:52PM (#59370208) Homepage Journal

            Um, yeah, no. Like the summary said, tangentially-sports related articles were OK.

            • by fibonacci8 ( 260615 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @03:41PM (#59370454)
              The entire writing/editing staff seem to think that's not good enough, and walked. It's almost like there's more important bits to the story that get left out if you omit politics.
              • Well thats nice for them. So you are suggesting that the new owners (pro-Trump?) didn't like the writers politics (I guess they were anti-Trump or something?), and thus wanted them to write about sports instead? Why not just come out and say it? You guys sure like your drama. But here is a reality check: it was probably about money all along. That is really all those VC types care about.

          • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @03:07PM (#59370276)
            So how do you rationalize that with Bernie's statement "I stand with the former Deadspin workers who decided not to bow to the greed of private equity vultures like Jim Spanfeller. This is the kind of greed that is destroying journalism across the country, and together we are going to take them on."?

            If, as you contend, publishing political stories would've resulted in more viewership and more ad revenue, isn't it the writers who were being greedy by wanting to write political stories since they maximize income? While it's the private equity owners who were sticking to principle and trying to keep it a sports site?
            • Bad press is still press. Spanfeller made it clear he was tightening his grip on content. 20 people read the room and resigned. I suspect they each think they can do better elsewhere. The most likely "greed of private equity vultures" was that the writers weren't getting paid enough to put up with his management direction, so they're willingly looking elsewhere now. I can rationalize that a degree of greed that results in self-interest exists and is valuable. I can also rationalize that there are degrees of
        • That's just it, they don't really care. They posted the ad impressions they got.

          Where? All I see is comments that the non-sports posts got more traffic than the sports posts.

        • Which is probably what will be the real death to journalism.
          Not Parisian Opinions, but the fact stories that will be published will be solely based of revenue and popular traffic.

          My primary news source is NPR that I listen to on my way to and from work. It does have a Liberal bias, I know that, but compared to most Commercial stuff out there, their bias is mostly tempered and more focused on the fact. NPR has the impression of being the boring news channel. But the thing is they try to maintain journalism
      • Hulk Hogan and Peter Thiel high five each other with a hearty "YEEEEEAAAHHH BROTHER"!
      • by Strill ( 6019874 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:21PM (#59370058)

        Deadspin is part of a family of sites, and they already own several others that are dedicated to the stuff Deadspin dips into. It seems like they wanted to dedicate Deadspin to sports, in order to diversify the different brands, and give Deadspin a unique niche.

        • It seems like they wanted to dedicate Deadspin to sports, in order to diversify the different brands, and give Deadspin a unique niche.

          That might be a reasonable suggestion, except that they shut down the politically-focused Splinter News 3 weeks ago.

          So perhaps it has more to do with the slant of the politics than the appropriateness of the stories on a site that people have understood for a long time was not just about sports.

          • Or maybe it has to do with making more money. You do know these are VC types, right? They aren't "out to get" anything else but more money.

    • It's not even that Bernie Sanders is calling him out for trying to keep the sport blog sports when they also purchased Gizmodo, Jezebel and The Onion. Keep them niche blogs on task and let the Onion cover the rest.

    • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:57PM (#59370004) Journal

      Who would have ever thought that people didn't want to go to a sports website to read about non-sports?

      Uh, dumbshit, people DO want to go to a sports website to read about non-sports. One of the interesting features of Deadspin was that they published their metrics with every single article, so you could see which of their posts was most popular. Turns out that the non-sports posts were many times more popular than their sports posts.

      Also, Deadspin was one of the most-viewed sports blogs on the web, and they were very profitable. They were easily the crown jewel of the entire G/O Media portfolio. So clearly, there is a market for this type of writing, and their VC owners shot their own dicks off by making the mistake of thinking the talented people who worked for them were as gutless and without honor as they were..

      Everything about the demise of Deadspin smells like a political operation. That's cool, because the writers who quit this week are very popular and very talented and will be somewhere else and will forever be pests to the billionaire venture capital pricks who destroyed something great.

      • by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:09PM (#59370032)

        Well, at least the writers can learn to code.

      • by geminidomino ( 614729 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:09PM (#59370036) Journal

        Just based on word choice here, I'm guessing that those "heroic" writers were... rather one-sided, politically? And it's your side?

      • by RightSaidFred99 ( 874576 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:19PM (#59370050)

        You seem to forget that their crybaby staff whined about ads (on an ad supported site) and cost them a $1M deal with Farmer's Insurance.

        The great thing is that the barrier to entry for a stupid online blog is pretty low, so all of you Workers of the World can just get together and start one. Why don't all these brilliant writers go start a new blog and sell ads with their amazing, one of a kind articles about how rich people suck and Trump is Orange?

        So I guess we'll see what happens. Will these amazing, unique writers who are _totally_ better than the randos they like to quote on Twitter, go and start a new site or bolster an existing site to startling levels of success, or will Deadspin just hire some sports writers and continue on as a sports site? Time will tell.

        • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:27PM (#59370086) Journal

          You seem to forget that their crybaby staff whined about ads (on an ad supported site) and cost them a $1M deal with Farmer's Insurance.

          For good reason. Remember, the reason the ads got higher metrics on the sports stories is because all the regular Deadspin users had long since given up on auto-play videos and the horrible G/O ad clutter and started using Ad-Block.

          It wasn't just the staff complaining about the ads. It was the entire readership of Deadspin.

        • by Known Nutter ( 988758 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:32PM (#59370112)

          with their amazing, one of a kind articles about how rich people suck and Trump is Orange?

          Don't forget about the hard-hitting investigative journalism that is Can I Fuck To My Friend's Band? which is currently on the front page!

          https://imgur.com/ahkGnBP [imgur.com]

          I sure hope they find a way to keep this pillar of journalism alive!

        • You seem to forget that their crybaby readers whined about ads

          The staff were just echoing reader complaints. Those intrusive ads were almost certainly losing readers. They were the a bad business decision, which resulted from prior bad decisions.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by steveha ( 103154 )

        Turns out that the non-sports posts were many times more popular than their sports posts.

        As Tim Pool pointed out [youtube.com], those metrics cannot measure the number of people who showed up to read about sports, then got disgusted by all the non-sports stuff and left the site.

        So what you are telling us is that when Deadspin published a lot of non-sports content, then among the readers who read the site anyway, many non-sports articles were popular. And my counter-points are:

        0) It seems very possible to me that there a

      • No, they didn't.
        Back in 2016, Deadspin had been profitable. But not so much recently. Deadspin's revenue had been dropping. That's WHY Univision sold it off in the first place. It doesn't matter how happy your writers are if they can't get the revenue needed to stay in business - and a former moderately successful website was failing. The owners attempted to increase advertising, and the writers responded by attacking the advertisers. There's dumb shit, and then there's turning your website into a veh

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Who would have ever thought that people didn't want to go to a sports website to read about non-sports?

      What's next - Slashdot's new owners will demand that the stories covered actually be "News for nerds, stuff that matters" and avoid purely political posts?!

    • Sports are far more complex then just the actual Game.
      There are factors like which team hires which players and for how much.
      College Sports and paying the students for doing sports that bring in millions of dollars.
      Tax payer money going to making stadiums.
      How the audience is reacting to the game
      Who the audience is reacting to the game ...
      The idea that a sports reports should just focus on the game, in this time is actually probably racist. As a lot of Athletes are publicly protesting racist acts from the p
    • There's a million sports outlets out there. Sports are largely fact based, so anyone can report on them with a few exceptions (you can't describe a game in detail, play by play).

      There's nothing to indicate new readers were being driven away. It's likely they were attracting new readers (that's part of an editor's job).

      I'm not a sports guy let alone a Deadspin reader. If I had to guess they ran favorable articles on topics like Colin Kaepernick, unpaid and abused college football players, and anythin
      • The reason Bernie calls out Vulture Capitalists is that they've been buying up all the media outlets

        Healthy media outlets are not for sale to begin with...

        "Vulture Capitalists" are kind enough people to try and pay someone for what has been turned into the equivalent of a meth lab house, and rebuild it in hopes of maybe making some money again.

  • Splinter news went a couple of weeks ago.

  • by chuckugly ( 2030942 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:31PM (#59369916)

    The staff did the right thing - if they don't want to write about sports on a sports site, they should go someplace else. Don't let the door hit your ass on the way out.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 )
      As the door closed on their way out the company collapsed. This was a case of poor leadership. A leader has to look more than the balance sheet to make decisions but the big picture. The boss was a bean counter, and he is responsible for killing the company. Not the staff, who knew they are in a bad place with this guy in charge.
      • It didn't collapse. Site is still there. They will find new writers by next week. Lots of people like to write about sports.

        • Without comments, the site will die, even with new writers.

          But the idea that, even if the site puts up new content, the new content will be compelling is laughable. The owners have history creating low-rent content farms.

          • Why? Are these writers so special that no other writer on the planet is capable of writing sport-related articles that generate COMMENTS? You guys are way too full of yourselves. They will find a few more out of work journalism majors next week.

  • People have had it (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 )

    People are tired of ceaseless, heavily slanted, or outright fabricated, political news. Deadspin was supposed to be a sports site, they instead managed to turn it into TMZ Jr., got their ass sued off, didn't learn a damn thing from it, and are now gone completely.

    The statement from Bernie is particular idiotic, even for him.

    • People are tired of ceaseless, heavily slanted, or outright fabricated, political news.

      Is that why Deadspin was so popular (and profitable)?

      • It's funny. I was curious about this so I did an online search. All I see is people using the exact same phrasing "popular, profitable". Only.. I can't find a single fucking iota of data about what they mean by "profitable". The closest I saw was references (not actual article or direct link) to some Forbes article saying they had their "most profitable" year in 2018.

        So unless you can provide evidence of these massive profits, I'm calling bullshit and assuming it's just a memetic talking point you lot are r

      • Yes, everyone posting the contrary opinion has never been to Deadspin.

  • It's really strange that writers at a sports site would quit their jobs for the right to write about things that have nothing to do with sports. Which is why I don't believe that's what's actually happening.

    I'm betting this was more a case of management telling them not to talk about Chinese influence on the NBA ... the NFL's fight with Colin Kaepernick ... domestic violence in pro sports.

    • by meta-monkey ( 321000 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:57PM (#59370002) Journal

      Apparently management said the intersection of sports and politics is fine, like Trump getting booed at the baseball game. All the things you mentioned would count as "sports intersecting."

      • Yeah, What they probably especially didn't like is their own fucking staff writing articles about how $1M ad deals suck because "ads are annoying". Probably management not a big fan of those, though I wonder why?
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:11PM (#59370042)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • My guess is that it's because of the profile of the people who write news these days. Gone are the days when you'd have actual journalists doing the job, replaced by English and various non-journalism liberal arts majors just doing the job to make ends meet when they can't find work that would actually fit their academic background. To these people it's really just a job the same way a minimum wage job where they get mistreated is to people who never went to university/college. They're only really intereste
  • by wtbman ( 1996948 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:37PM (#59369942)
    I want to love visiting jalopnik.com but they make it very unpleasant when every other story is some repost from jezebel or some other anti Trump or anti internal combustion engine story. If it's a automotive site, or a sports site, keep the political b.s. out of it. I don't care or need to know what your political opinion is. If I want to see that I know where to find it. Sometimes when the company atmosphere is toxic you have got to clean it out...
    • Last time I went there the page still looked like half "sponsored content" even with all my ad and script blockers. The commentary on every single story no matter what the subject is orange man bad.

  • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:39PM (#59369948)

    ... because I never heard of it until it wasn't.

  • by ravenscar ( 1662985 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:42PM (#59369956)

    Manager: "Jim, it looks like you've been writing code for a new political website."
    Jim: "That's right Trisha, I'm really passionate about politics."
    Manager: "Well, you see, we're a bank. Building political sites isn't our thing. Please work on our banking software."
    Jim: "This is outrageous! I quit!"
    Bernie: "Look at this sad example of big banking keeping people from following their hearts. It's criminal. This won't happen when I'm president."

    I mean, kudos to the staff for leaving to do something about which they are passionate. More power to them. Still, it hardly seems like something to get all twisted up over. This coming from a guy who appreciates the voice Bernie brings to the political world.

    • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:00PM (#59370012) Homepage Journal

      Bernie Sanders said in a statement Thursday evening, "I stand with the former Deadspin workers who decided not to bow to the greed of private equity vultures like Jim Spanfeller. This is the kind of greedgreed that is destroying journalism across the country, and together we are going to take them on."

      Insisting that their sports-focused webite focus on sports-related stories is an example of "the kind of greed that is destroying journalisim"? If the Bernie Sanders quote didn't mention the site specifically, I would have thought it was a joke, showing the silliness of injecting politics into every story...

      • You are welcome to read the opinions of the readers all over the site. One of the reasons it was as successful as it was was explicitly because they weren't a straight sports blog. In fact, some of the most popular articles in the history of the site were non-sports articles.

        It was certainly not for everyone, and it was a bit of a niche, but definitely a profitable niche.

        • One of the reasons it was as successful as it was

          Must have been super successful to get bought out! *rolls eyes*.

          Hint, success is not equal to "has opinions I agree with".

          Successful sites do not have large shifts made to content and focus.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Actually it isn't anything like that. But that aside: this is what the world looks like once the VC money stops coming in to fund your lifestyles. Get used to it kids!

  • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:43PM (#59369962) Homepage Journal

    There's a lesson to be learned here about refusing to stick to the topic your website is about, and deciding against better judgement to throw up offtopic political crap no one cares about.

    Maybe a certain technical website should reconsider running these political stories that aren't really related to technology at all.

    • by RightSaidFred99 ( 874576 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:49PM (#59369976)

      I wouldn't say 'no one cares about', I'd say 'a very loudmouth vocal minority cares about'. It's the same thing with ESPN, people are inundated all day long with politics, politics, politics, they don't need ESPN adding another woke voice to the chorus.

      Expect twitter douches to make a big deal of this, and other blogs posing as news sites to amplify these twitter nobodies to try to make it look like this is a Big Deal, when in real life probably less than 1% of the population gives even the vaguest flying fuck about this one way or the other.

      • Getting less than 1% of the population to visit your site once a month is a good business. Getting them back 6 times is a winner. The difference is that while many opinion businesses survive on pissing off at least a quarter of their audience every single day (talk radio is built on this), this might not work for blogs, no matter the size. But some will rest easy, comforted by the reality that the rich old white guys that make these decisions that drive their talent away will make even more money because th

    • People always forget that part of the tagline.

      Maybe because if you check, it isn't actually visible on the site anymore since the BizX takeover.

      Let's be honest here: This is a BizX PR outlet zombie nowadays.

      People moved on to Reddit a long time ago.
      The problem is, that Reddit seems like a zombie too, and I don't know where people moved from there.
      Not ycombinator. That's for sure. They are a very weird in-crowd with rules on what gets upvoted or downvoted that are very different from and often almost the opp

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @01:46PM (#59369968)

    I think a real problem with lots of sites is they just cover too much. Not every site can be general news, and most if they try do a poor job of it.

    Tightly focused sites seem like they would have a lot better chance to have quality content, and be more compelling to visit. As "funny" as Deadspin may have been, I never visited it nor did I even see links to it on social media... so it seems like they were doing a very poor job.

    • I think a real problem with lots of sites is they just cover too much. Not every site can be general news, and most if they try do a poor job of it.

      If only there were a site that strictly did news that mattered to nerds.

    • You're missing the point. Deadspin was never trying to be everything and never covered general news.

  • " staffed by contributors making as little as $25,000 a year"

    What a laugh! SI 'contributors' are and will be selling their work to multiple outlets. SI by this measure is overpaying! But it's not really about the pay, is it? Are these sports 'journalists' decrying the lack of value they now represent? Well, improve your product, compete, or, as the subjects of your work, athletes, know, move on. Losing sucks. Go sell cars or insurance, or run a restaurant.

    "Deadspin was founded as a sports blog in 2005"
    "was

  • Editorialize much? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by x0 ( 32926 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @02:20PM (#59370054) Homepage

    Deadspin was founded as a sports blog in 2005 and was originally part of Gawker Media, which was sued out of existence thanks to a lawsuit brought by Hulk Hogan (and funded by Peter Thiel).

    FTLOG, not, it wasn't thanks to HH or Thiel. A bunch of assholes decided to publish a sex tape in order to make money. Nothing newsworthy happened, but Gawker thought they'd make a mint.

    The subject of the tape took them to court for breach of privacy, and the TNZ wannabees lost.

    They fucked up, and then they paid the price.

    m

    • This. Gawker was feeling their oats and figured they could flout the law even after multiple court reprimands, they have nobody to blame but themselves. Doesn't matter if Hogan was funded by Thiel, a gofundme page, or donations from orphans, nobody made them die on that tawdry hill.
  • Hey, his company, his rules...don't like it? QUIT!
  • There's still a market for shallow, sophomoric ranting. It just doesn't pay well.
  • It was direct outlet of Rupert Murdoch / News Corporation, albeit with the link well-hidden. (You can only find it, by searching top-down. Not by going bottom-up from Gawker. Useful sources are those corproate pages where they brag which corporations and brands they own, then going to their sites and looking for lower levels. Sometimes it take some other sites like Wikipedia or business info sites or my favorite system D way: The owners of the domains.)

  • How is the site "dead"? It is still up. I just checked it (never been there before - looks like typical Hipster stupid stuff) There is content posted yesterday (something about Palestinian soccer). They will just hire new writers. It isn't that tough to find guys willing to write about sports. I know the person who submitted this probably worked there, but get over yourself.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Didn't see the picture, but my guess are the writers are: white, young, bearded, horn rimmed glasses, flannel shirts. How close am I?

  • So do they all have trust funds or is there already a funded successor ready to be revealed as a rescuer for the brave martyrs?

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @03:12PM (#59370300) Journal

    IDGAF about their mass resignation.
    How many of these ever-so-righteous turds cheerfully outed Peter Thiel ("but he had come out to his close friends" isn't really an excuse) and then essentially defended it because of his politics?

    https://thumbor.forbes.com/thu... [forbes.com]

    Normally, the 4th estate relies on their privilege to protect them from recourse, their problem was that they shit on someone with a crapton of money, the willingness to take the effort to fuck them up, and the patience to wait for the right horse to back. Unsurprisingly, it didn't take long for them to publish Hulk's sex tape (hyuck hyuck, stupid pro wrestler ironic joke-person, right) and he wrung them out to dry.

    Fuck them. I'm glad he destroyed them, they can go find some other online blog to posture and preen at.

  • by Guspaz ( 556486 ) on Friday November 01, 2019 @05:04PM (#59370814)

    The staff had turned Deadspin from a sports news site into a shitposting site. The owners wanted their sports news site to post about sports news, and not articles like "Lady shits all over the floor at a Tim Hortons and throws it at people" and "Things we shoved up our butts this year" (both recent real articles on the front page at the same time, both specifically shown by the labour union as an example of the sort of articles that needed to be protected) just goes to show you that the ownership was completely right to crack down on the staff trying to turn a sports news site into a shitposting blog.

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