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posted by LaminatorX on Tuesday July 21 2015, @02:32AM   Printer-friendly
from the sad-Fourth-Estate-of-affairs dept.

Tommy Craggs, Gawker Media's executive editor, and Max Read, the website's editor in chief, have resigned from Gawker after the removal of a widely-panned article, a move they say represents an "indefensible breach of the notoriously strong firewall between Gawker's business interests and the independence of its editorial staff":

At issue is a post published July 16 about a media executive who Gawker said sought a nighttime encounter with a gay porn star. The porn star, the site reported, tried to extort the executive, who is married to a woman.

The story was widely criticized because, as some people pointed out, the media executive is a private individual [and] not a public figure. Then on July 17, Gawker's Managing Partnership voted 4-2 to remove the post. Craggs and Heather Dietrick, Gawker's president who serves as the company's chief legal counsel, dissented.

Here's what Glenn Greenwald had to say about Gawker's story:

The story had no purpose other than to reveal that the male, married-to-a-woman Chief Financial Officer of a magazine company – basically an executive accountant – hired a male escort. When the escort discovered the real-life identity of his prospective client – he's the brother of a former top Obama official – he began blackmailing the CFO by threatening to expose him unless he used his political connections to help the escort in a housing discrimination case he had against a former landlord. Gawker completed the final step of the blackmail plot by publishing the text messages between the two and investigating and confirming the identity of the client, all while protecting the identity of the blackmailing escort.

[...] The reasons for regarding the story as deeply repugnant are self-evident. The CFO they outed is not a public figure. Even if he were, the revelation has zero public interest: it's not as though he's preached against gay rights or any form of sexual behavior. It's just humiliating someone and trying to destroy his life for fun, for its own sake. By publishing the article, Gawker aided the escort's blackmail plot, arguably even becoming a partner in it. Even worse, the story (probably unwittingly) reeks of all-too-familiar homophobic shaming: it's supposed to be humiliating at least in part because he's a man hiring a "gay porn star," as Gawker editor-in-chief Max Read put it as he promoted the "scoop." The escort's identity has been confirmed by others and he seems to have a history of serious mental distress, which Gawker is clearly exploiting. Beyond all that, Gawker has an ongoing war with Reddit, owned by the magazine company for which the CFO works, which suggests this is part of some petty, vindictive drive for vengeance, with the CFO as collateral damage.


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday July 21 2015, @11:58AM

    by VLM (445) on Tuesday July 21 2015, @11:58AM (#211876)

    Isn't that basically the definition of journalism? The real world kind not ivory tower? Like, every freaking scandal ever on the evening news or most daytime infotainment TV shows or all celebrity journalism or ...

    The CFO they outed is not a public figure.

    LOL sure whatever. Saying it doesn't make it true. Theres a line, and people are trying to make this dude look as anonymous as the HVAC tech grunt who lives across the street from me, but come on, a high level exec of a major propaganda outlet with connections to the president? Really? If so, I don't want to ever hear anything about the Koch brothers again, they're just innocent private citizen chicken farmers, yeah.

    it's supposed to be humiliating

    Does anyone really care other than the dudes wife and some irrelevant 75 year old fox news watchers and their equivalent gawker readers? I'm sure the church laidies will all be in a tizzy until the TV tells them what to be in a new tizzy about tomorrow.

    The part that interests me that I haven't bothered to research, is did the dude successfully get blackmailed, and if so then there's a shitstorm descending on basically his lifetimes work, because nobody would trust anything he previously signed, because its probably not his first time with a dude and god knows whats been covered up. On the other hand if he didn't get successfully blackmailed, then he's a tribute to the honesty of his profession, the kind of exec or kind of accountant that makes the 99% of them who are crooks look bad. Unfortunately its the most important part of the story and not being covered. The CFO as a CFO (not as a husband or a generic guy or generic worker) is either a hero or a goat and nobody is talking about which and thats too bad.

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  • (Score: 2) by c0lo on Tuesday July 21 2015, @12:49PM

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday July 21 2015, @12:49PM (#211881) Journal

    Isn't that basically the definition of journalism?

    Nope, that's paparazzism/muckracking - may be interesting for many but not for me. Journalism is reporting about something that potentially affects more than a handful of persons.

    Really? If so, I don't want to ever hear anything about the Koch brothers again, they're just innocent private citizen chicken farmers, yeah.

    A push too far, though. See, the sexual orientation of Koch brothers is of no public/societal consequence. As such, as evil those brothers may be, this is an info that I reckon needs to stay private.
    Not the same for their lobbying budget, but... well... it's not a perfect world we are living in, much less an ivory tower.

    and if so then there's a shitstorm descending on basically his lifetimes work, because nobody would trust anything he previously signed

    Even if so, it's still not my business - I'm not a shareholder in CondeNash and I suppose neither most of the millions in US.

    The CFO as a CFO (not as a husband or a generic guy or generic worker) is either a hero or a goat and nobody is talking about which and thats too bad.

    See, one more reason this is not journalism, it's shit.

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford