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February 22, 2009 3:20 PM PST

Gawker to absorb Defamer gossip blog

by Steven Musil
  • 1 comment
Updated at 4:35 p.m. PST with Denton e-mail.

Gawker Media has apparently had a change of heart regarding the sale of its Defamer gossip site and decided to fold it into the larger company.

Nick Denton, founder and president of Gawker Media, announced the move Sunday in a company blog:

It's Oscars day, a good a time as any to do this: Hollywood gossip site Defamer is being merged into Gawker, the company's flagship gossip title. The four-year-old title will continue as Gawker's entertainment column; the movie-industry stories will remain showcased on Defamer.com but the sites will be staffed and managed as one.

Gawker now draws more than 3m visitors a month -- four times the audience it had in 2007. More than three-quarters of Gawker's readership is from outside New York. The inclusion of Defamer's Hollywood gossip -- following an expansion of political coverage last year and the incorporation of Valleywag -- reflects Gawker's evolution into a national gossip site.

In an e-mail to CNET News, Denton denied the notion that he couldn't find a buyer, saying that he had "two serious bids. But ad revenues (were) better than expected, so less pressure to cut costs."

Denton, who has been reducing the size of the blog network, announced his intention to sell the blog last December when it sold its Consumerist blog to the publisher of Consumer Reports. That sale followed his decision to shut down Valleywag, the blog network's Silicon Valley gossip title, and fold its operations into Gawker. Denton also sold off three of its smallest blogs last April, blaming the softening online advertising market for the sales.

Denton's handling of Gawker has been frugal, continually consolidating resources toward the blogs that were pulling in traffic and ad dollars. Early last October, Denton orchestrated a personnel shuffling that saw 14 percent of the company's editorial staff laid off but new hires made at some of the most successful titles like gadget blog Gizmodo and feminist chronicle Jezebel.

December 30, 2008 4:20 PM PST

Gawker Media sells Consumerist blog

by Steven Musil
  • 2 comments

Gawker Media announced Tuesday that it has sold its Consumerist blog to Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports.

The blog, which is often an outlet for consumer complaints, will become a new division within the publisher. The current editorial staff is expected to remain, and there are no plans to change coverage, according to a report in The New York Times.

"We don't want to acquire the Consumerist and then squelch it in some way," Kevin McKean, vice president and editorial director of Consumers Union, told the newspaper.

Terms of the deal, which is expected to close Thursday, were not revealed.

Nick Denton, founder and president of Gawker Media, put the blog up for sale in November, on the same day he made public his decision to shut down Valleywag, the blog network's Silicon Valley gossip title. He also announced Tuesday his plans to sell the gossip site Defamer.

Denton, who also sold off three of its smallest blogs in April, said the softening online advertising market led to the decision to sell the blogs. On the same day he announced his intentions to sell the Consumerist blog, Denton published a detailed missive about his dire predictions for the online ad market.

"I think people have generally been too optimistic" about online ads, Denton told the Times on Tuesday.

Denton's handling of Gawker has been frugal, continually consolidating resources toward the blogs that were pulling in traffic and ad dollars. Early in October, Denton orchestrated a personnel shuffling that saw 14 percent of the company's editorial staff laid off but new hires made at some of the most successful titles like gadget blog Gizmodo and feminist chronicle Jezebel.

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