27 July 2015
Gawker Fires Bill Arkin
Gawker Geithner article retrieved before removal by Archive.org:
https://cryptome.org/2015/07/gawker-geithner.pdf
From: "William M. Arkin" <warkin@igc.org>
To: "William M. Arkin" <warkin@igc.org>
Subject: Leaving Gawker
Date: Mon, 27 Jul 2015 09:51:39 -0400
Dear Friends,
Two Fridays ago, when I read a story posted on Gawker that seemed to senselessly
out a nobody for soliciting a gay porn prostitute, I immediately thought
someone should be fired.
I never thought it would be me.
To me, the story wasnt out of character for Gawker, nor did I think
it vile or any of the hyperbolic adjectives heaped upon it: It
seemed perfectly in line with the aesthetic of this world of digital anarchy.
And I thought that amidst a high stakes legal battle of Hulk Hogan versus
Gawker in which the company was arguing that it was justified to post a sex
tape because Hogan was a public figure, someone had made a grave error in
demonstrating that that really didnt matter, that if Gawker had to
the goods and the article was meticulous in documenting its nothingness
with texts and screenshots of Fedex receipts it would publish them.
The owner of Gawker took down the post, I guess the first time that was done
in 13 years, and though at first I thought it a defensive move to symbolize
the companys journalistic creds, in reality behind the scenes it seemed
the end of a long internal fight. The top editor in chief and the editor
at Gawker resigned in protest, claiming that Nick Denton had done exactly
what he had promised previously not to do in setting up an editorial staff
to insulate him and the business side. The two editors who resigned
were as impetuous as the owner in citing this and that reasons for why they
had to go. The external shitstorm, the resignations, and then the internal
drama left the staff in the lurch and without leadership and without even
a clear mission. And just let me say: Though almost every article I have
read since has captured Gawkers rapid meltdown, I havent really
seen one that captures fully what happened and why.
But heres the truth: The goods on Geithner were so good, the story
almost wrote itself. Thats exactly the same that Ive experienced
working for network television or the mainstream media and is commentary
on our frenzied society. But it is not unique; not even to new media. And
it all happened on a Friday afternoon, including the throat clearing and
cowardly call I got telling me to take the buyout. So the next time the CIA
or Pentagon puts out an unpleasant press release on a Friday, take pity:
Thats how all institutions, old and new act. Now the Gawker
management is trying to portray the corrective as some new Gawker
20 percent nicer or is it kinder or is it smarter, I forget
and hopefully the readers wont notice or care and the advertisers and
sponsors will return.
One last thought about Gawker: Im grateful that they offered me an
opportunity, there are some fantastic writers there and I truly admire the
uniqueness (and fun) that Jalopnik, Deadspin, Jezebel, Gizmodo, and Kotaku
represent. But like social media as a whole, it is also a miserable place,
so driven by its own feverish pursuit that it has no clue what kind of world
it inhabits and thus helps build. I hate to be hyperbolic, but want to understand
ISIS or the Tea Party or Occupy or Charleston or Dylan? Look no further than
Gawker and its ilk, which means look no further than twitter or your own
so-called smartphone: We are making the world a miserable place. Im
glad I can withdraw and think about it.
Here is the point where Im supposed to say something like we are all
seeking the same goal, that there is a common thread of journalism, enshrined
in the First Amendment and pursuing some civic virtue to make the world a
better place, blah, blah, blah. Hey, I understand it isnt everyones
calling and I understand that journalism is a pretty broad and
even increasingly meaningless label. But in Nick Dentons articulation
of the new Gawker that he put out today, he speaks of reporting on
celebrities and other public figures who use the courts and other pressure
to suppress the truth and doesnt even mention the government
per se.
Four months ago, I started a channel at Gawker called Phase Zero that
specifically sought to treat the government with the same ferocity, and not
just the government but secret government. It was a long-time dream and a
long-term endeavor. Our two-person band made some useful headways and we
had much planned, but alas: If I had reported that General so and so was
secretly a vegetarian I would have been more easily recognized as one with
the mission. I just dont think thats news.
Bill
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