By
ALEX WILLIAMS
IT
had all the elements for the perfect tabloid gossip item — a clash between star
financial journalists, big egos and a surprise ouster that had Wall Street
buzzing: Henry Blodget, the well-known disgraced-analyst-turned-financial-pundit
and co-founder of the much-read blog, The Business Insider, stunned the
financial community last week by firing John Carney, the star managing editor
of the site’s Clusterstock blog, reportedly because of philosophical differences
over the site’s coverage.
The
news, which was quickly picked up by the Reuters financial blogger Felix
Salmon, who subsequently sparked an online spat of his own with Mr. Blodget,
did not break in a gossip column like The New York Post’s Page Six or in the
pages of The Wall Street Journal, which in a previous era might have owned this
story. Rather, the scoop came from a 25-year-old Village Voice gossip blogger
and University of Utah dropout named Foster Kamer.
Surfing
the Web after business hours one evening, Mr. Kamer ran across speculation
about Mr. Carney’s job status on a Twitter post by Gawker Media’s owner, Nick
Denton. After 90 minutes of phone calls to sources within the financial
journalism subculture, Mr. Kamer nailed down the item and posted it on the
Voice site.
The
lines between “reporter” and “blogger,” “gossip” and “news” have blurred almost
beyond distinction. No longer is blogging something that marginalized editorial
wannabes do from home, in a bathrobe, because they haven’t found a “real” job.
Blogging now is a career path in its own right, offering visibility, influence
and an actual paycheck. As more gossip action in a variety of fields moves
online, young writers who might have hungrily chased an editorial assistant job
at Condé Nast a few years ago now move to New York with the dream of making it
as a blogger — either launching their own blog into the big time, à la Perez
Hilton, or getting snapped up by a prominent blog network like Gawker Media or
MediaBistro.
And
although the better-known newspaper gossip columnists still churn along, among
them Richard Johnson and Cindy Adams of The New York Post, and George Rush and
Joanna Molloy of The New York Daily News, much of the action has moved online,
with the up-and-coming players having little in common with legendary
predecessors like Walter Winchell and Liz Smith. While Ms. Smith, 87 and still
active, toiled in journalism for nearly 30 years before getting her own
by-lined column (working first, among other things, as a typist, proofreader
and radio producer), some of the newest notables in gossip are still in their
20s and only a few years removed from the days when they blogged from their
college dorm rooms about fraternity hazing mishaps and the quality of the
cafeteria food.
The
following are profiles of nine emerging gossip bloggers, whose names came up in
interviews with influential blog entrepreneurs, fellow bloggers and other
journalists as potential future stars of the online world. The list, by no
means exhaustive, represents a cross-section of New Yorkers covering varied
beats — entertainment, fashion, real estate, finance —for a variety of
prominent blog networks. Some, like Sara Polsky of Curbed and Lilit Marcus of
The Gloss, are relatively new to the business, but recently installed in a
position of prominence by Web star-makers like Lockhart Steele, who runs Curbed
and Eater, or Elizabeth Spiers, a founder of Gawker in 2002 who has introduced
a number of successful blogs since then. Others, like Fred Mwangaguhunga of
MediaTakeOut.com, are popular niche players who are quickly crossing into the
mainstream.
ERIN
CARLSON: Editor, Crushable
If
you’re starting a high-profile blog in the already saturated, and fiercely
competitive, celebrity-gossip category, you had better have an edge. And
Elizabeth Spiers, who debuted Crushable last month for the Canadian company
b5media, says she has a plan to differentiate her new blog from the
competition, including heavyweights like Perez Hilton, who happens to have been
a roommate years ago, and new sites like Bonnie Fuller’s Hollywood Life. Go
young.
Crushable,
run by the 29-year-old Ms. Carlson, a former Associated Press entertainment
reporter, seeks to leave the bulk of the Brangelina coverage to the other guys
and focus more on a Teen Vogue-ish 15-to-25-year-old female market. So look out
for more news on more hunky young stars like Matt Bomer of “White Collar” and
Cory Monteith of “Glee,” as well as tweens like Lourdes Leon, Madonna’s
13-year-old fashion designer daughter.
Ms.
Carlson seems well-pedigreed for her job. At The Associated Press, she reported
the story of the $14 million sale of photos of the Brad-Angelina twins, and
last year, the story of Sean Penn’s split from his wife, Robin Wright Penn.
NOTABLE
SCOOP: Reported this week that the rumored relationship between Rob Kardashian
and Angela Simmons, which some gossips had speculated was a Kardashian family
publicity stunt, was real, according to a source.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: None yet. It’s early.
TOMMYE
FITZPATRICK: Editor, Fashionologie
Short
indeed is the list of fashion influencers whose journey to that tent in Bryant
Park took a detour through a biomedical-engineering course load at Duke
University. But that’s what Ms. Fitzpatrick, now 25, was mired in when she
started Fashionologie in her dorm room in 2005 as a kind of study break. In
five years, she has managed to distance herself from the infinite number of
would-be Anna Wintours blogging from their bedrooms and actually made the
industry insiders take notice. Fashionologie now attracts 1.5 million
page-views a month, and has seen a 45 percent increase in visits over the last
year, according to Ms. Fitzpatrick, and is being linked to established fashion
sites like Refinery29 and The Cut at New York Magazine.
While
primarily a news aggregator and style curator, as opposed to a gotcha-style
gossip columnist, Ms. Fitzpatrick, is driving traffic while providing plenty of
original content of late. In competition with rival sites like Fashionista, she
reports from the front lines at the shows in Paris, London and Milan, and
interviews designers like Alexander Wang and Riccardo Tisci for Givenchy. She
routinely mines online fashion forums for tips, sources and insider arcana
(when Vogue’s André Leon Talley joined Twitter, you read about it in
Fashionologie).
NOTABLE
SCOOP: She recently reported that Alexander McQueen had done final fittings on
a substantial part of his fall collection before his death.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: Posted one item recently describing a Twitter account supposedly
belonging to Anna Wintour’s daughter, Bee Shaffer. But when she noticed that it
linked to one purporting to be be her mother’s, which had only one tweet
(“those poseurs got to stop”), she determined it to be bogus and quickly
removed the item.
FOSTER
KAMER: Staff writer, The Village Voice news blog, Runnin’ Scared
Mr.
Kamer may cite The Village Voice’s co-founder, Norman Mailer, as a personal
inspiration, but online he comes off a bit like a Wi-Fi era hybrid of J. J.
Hunsecker and H. L. Mencken, delivering missives on the news media, politics
and New York culture in an acerbic, knowing tone — even by Gawker alumni
standards —sometimes at lengths that call to mind Op-Ed essays more than gossip
items. The former weekend editor at Gawker and assistant editor at
BlackBookMag.com, he seems to know everyone and everything about the tight-knit
— some might say incestuous — New York online-gossip subculture. The big
figures in that subculture consider Mr. Kamer a rising force. “He’s supremely
talented,” said Mr. Steele, when asked his opinion on which rising stars to
focus on for this article. “He qualifies as a must-include.”
Mr.
Kamer, who started at The Voice last month, wasted little time afflicting the
comfortable. An off-color wisecrack about James Dolan in a recent item about
the media mogul’s rumored purchase of the Gothamist blog may have cost his
paper more than $20,000 in advertising revenue; the IFC Center, a Dolan
property, recently pulled a $400-a-week ad from The Voice, Mr. Kamer claimed in
his blog. The square-off inspired Gawker’s Adrian Chen to joke in a recent item
that his former colleague “has been busily blogging the Village Voice to
financial ruin.”
It
might be a reasonable price to pay for alternative weekly if Mr. Kamer can help
The Voice, struggling for an identity along with most alternative weeklies in
the Internet era, end up with its biggest gossip must-read since James
Ledbetter in the ’90s.
NOTABLE
SCOOP: The John Carney story.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: At Gawker, he ran an item about a University of Minnesota journalism
professor excoriating the traditional news organizations for ignoring the Jon
and Kate Gosselin story. The story, picked up from The Huffington Post, turned
out to be a satirical piece written by the humorist Andy Borowitz.
STEVE
KRAKAUER: Television editor, Mediaite.com
No
one thought the world needed another media gossip site when Dan Abrams, a
former general manager of MSNBC, started Mediaite.com last July. But at least
he brought in a credentialed team — including the well-known media blogger
Rachel Sklar — to help him elbow his way into a crowded market. At 26, Mr.
Krakauer is not only the site’s youngest editor, but also a seasoned reporter
in his own right. He honed his skills as an assistant editor at MediaBistro’s
influential TVNewser site, which became an industry staple under former editor
Brian Stelter, now a New York Times media reporter.
He
is already starting to break a steady stream of scoops, like his posts that
reported that ABC was planning a major layoff in February, or the story last
October that Fox News’s 3 a.m. show was getting better ratings than CNN’s 8
p.m. primetime show — a fact that Fox later worked into an advertising
campaign. Some in the news media are starting to take notice. Last year, Rush
Limbaugh quoted Mr. Krakauer’s TVNewser podcast with Terry Moran, the co-anchor
of ABC’s “Nightline,” in his radio show. The Hollywood site TheWrap.com listed
him along with Ryan Seacrest and The Los Angeles Times media reporter, Joe Flint,
on its list of “50 TV Insiders to Follow Right Now” on Twitter last fall.
NOTABLE
SCOOP: His post in February about the NBC cafeteria’s fried chicken menu in
honor of Black History Month had Wanda Sykes joking about it on Jay Leno that
night.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: Last August, reported that Fox News’s Twitter account had been hacked
and littered with nasty comments about Sarah Palin and Bill O’Reilly — a juicy
scoop, except that the account was a hoax.
BESS
LEVIN: Editor, Dealbreaker
Success
is often just being in the right place at the right time. So it was perhaps
fortuitous that Bess Levin’s former co-editor at this sharp-fanged financial
gossip site, John Carney, left it for Ms. Levin to run solo in the fall of
2008, just as blood was starting to flow on Wall Street. Since then, Ms. Levin
has elbowed her way into an exclusive and still heavily male club, becoming a
must-read not only for $250,000-a-year-bonus investment bank drones wondering
which boss’s head is about to roll, but also among the corner-office types
themselves. Financial powerhouses like JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon, as well as
hedge fund managers like Steve Cohen, Dan Loeb, and Ken Griffin, have been
known to visit the site.
In
February, Dealbreaker was named one of the 10 best Wall Street blogs by The
Wall Street Journal’s David Weidner, who wrote that “Dealbreaker is full of
Wall Street snark and has a potty mouth to boot.” Of the 10, Ms. Levin’s was
only one of two written by a woman (though a few are anonymous), and certainly
the only one by a woman who was 25 and never worked on the Street.
NOTABLE
SCOOP: After BusinessWeek published a profile of Mr. Cohen in 2003 that
referred to, but did not show, party invitations that his wife sent out of the
prominent but discreet hedge-fund manager dressed up in a king costume, the
invitations entered into Wall Street lore, sight unseen. Ms. Levin finally dug
up an image of the regal invitation and ran it last November.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: Published an “unfounded rumor” that a major hedge fund’s prime brokers
were threatening liquidation at the height of the financial mess in late 2008.
It turns out the rumor was indeed “unfounded,” so she quickly removed it under
pressure.
LILIT
MARCUS: Editor, The Gloss
The
Gloss, a fashion and beauty site that also focuses on career, dating, women’s
issues and culture, is another new site in the growing b5 media stable that was
overseen by Elizabeth Spiers, a challenge of sorts to Jezebel.com. Ms. Marcus,
27, is its highly regarded editor. Before taking over at Jewcy.com, an
irreverent blog about Jewish issues and culture, in 2008, Ms. Marcus founded
SaveTheAssistants.com, a forum that gave beleaguered assistants a place to
sound off anonymously about their jerk bosses, like the one who stole a book
from his assistant and gave it to his girlfriend. The site grew out of her
grueling experience as an administrative assistant for a media company.
The
site, which she later spun off into a book, attracted attention on National
Public Radio and CNN.com, which compared the tales on the site with those on
“The Office”: “Bosses like Michael Scott do exist and employees have to deal
with them every day,” the article reported. “The good news is they don’t have
to commiserate alone.” Even though Ms. Marcus has never named the company that
inspired the site, its management still threatens to sue her, she said.
“There’s a saying where I come from: ‘if they’re shooting at you, you’re doing
something right,” the North Carolina-bred Ms. Marcus said. “I think about that
a lot as a gossip writer.”
While
Ms. Marcus and Ms. Spiers acknowledge the inevitable Jezebel comparisons, they
also bristle. The site, which focuses on fashion and beauty as much as the
latest from the feminist writer Cynthia Ozick, aims to be lighter, Ms. Spiers
said. “The Gloss is more playful, it’s funnier,” she said of her site, which
relies heavily on fashion and beauty as well as stories about bigger women’s
issues. “Jezebel is more Ms. Magazine. The Gloss is not a humor site, but humor
is one of its key components.”
NOTABLE
SCOOP: A recent Gloss item about tensions between Tinsley Mortimer and her
sister-in-law Minnie Mortimer, a fashion designer, was picked up by Page Six.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: It’s early, and no major strike-throughs yet, although the site did take
some heat from fashion bloggers for not doing more to get the other side on a
recent post about an alleged sexual overture by the photographer Terry
Richardson toward one of his models.
FRED
MWANGAGUHUNGA: Founder, MediaTakeOut.com
A
Columbia Law-educated former corporate lawyer from Hollis, Queens, whose
previous professional apogee was founding a high-end laundry and dry-cleaning
service, Mr. Mwangaguhunga came to blogging in his fourth decade of life, a
little late to qualify as a prodigy. But that doesn’t seem to have held him
back. In four years, his site, which focuses on the urban culture industries,
now attracts a following of five million unique visitors a month; traffic grew
by 125 percent last year alone. His items are routinely picked up by sites like
TMZ.com, enhancing his reputation — which he is perfectly happy to encourage —
as the Matt Drudge of African-American entertainment.
And
lately, mainstream journalists and sites are starting to pay a lot more
attention. Mediaite.com, the media gossip blog, called him one of the top
online blog editors of 2009 and explaining: “The site, which covers black
celebrity gossip, boasts an enormous readership and regularly breaks big
stories. To wit: they called Lady Gaga’s decision to pull out of Kanye West’s
tour a day before it was reported elsewhere, and — if this can be called a
scoop — they were the first to run the infamous nude Rihanna pictures.”
Meanwhile, the site’s first post about Chris Brown’s assault on his former
girlfriend attracted 100,000 hits in its first few minutes, Mr. Mwangaguhunga
said.
Last
year, The New York Beacon, a newspaper that focuses on African-American issues,
praised his “significant reach in the vastly ignored urban community.” And Mr.
Mwangaguhunga himself seems supremely confident about his site’s future: “If
done properly, I don’t see any reason why MediaTakeOut can’t be as popular as
TMZ.”
NOTABLE
SCOOP: That news about Lady Gaga.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: Announced the birth of the N.F.L. player Vince Young’s daughter, before
paternity tests showed that the child was not his.
MAUREEN
O’CONNOR: Weekend and night editor, Gawker
Talk
about coming of age in the Internet era. Ms. O’Connor, 25, has never had a
journalism job that even remotely involved a print product, having started at
Princeton blogging for the IvyGate, a popular gossip blog about the Ivy League.
“Our bread and butter was the scandals and follies of Ivy League students and
faculty — hazing bloopers, secret societies, campus controversies,” said Ms.
O’Connor, who tracked campus stories like that of Aliza Shvarts, the Yale art
student who stirred a national controversy with her hoax project supposedly
involving aborted fetuses, during her time there.
After
graduation, Ms. O’Connor landed a job at Tina Brown’s Daily Beast as a
home-page editor, and then, in November, started as weekend editor for Gawker,
the Nick Denton site that has been the launch pad for nearly a whole generation
of blogosphere stars, including Choire Sicha and Jessica Coen, who served the online
managing editor for New York Magazine before recently returning to Jezebel, a
Gawker Media blog.
Ms.
O’Connor is off to a strong start at Gawker. Her lengthy obituary of the
heiress Casey Johnson — “among the first celebutantes to decamp to Hollywood in
search of 21C fame,” she wrote — attracted 100,000 hits in January.
NOTABLE
SCOOP: In January, she began an “investigation” into the White House budget
director Peter Orszag’s hair — a rug or a barber’s misfire, you be the judge —
that became a fleeting Internet meme in its own right.
MEMORABLE
GAFFE: Took Fox News to task over a typo in a chyron (a term for the graphics
at the bottom of a TV screen) identifying former the Arizona Congressman J.D.
Hayworth as a “congresswoman.” Too bad Ms. O’Connor misspelled the word chyron
in the post.
SARA
POLSKY: Editor, Curbed
Curbed,
the real-estate blog that attracts two million page views a month, is a
something of an addiction for many in a town that is (still) addicted to real
estate, even after the crash. Ms. Polsky, 24, is its newest voice, an
understudy to longtime editor Joey Arak and Lockhart Steele, the site’s
founder, who is one of the most influential blog personalities in town, and
thus a star-maker of sorts. Ms. Polsky, whose prior experience consisted of a
year as an editorial assistant at Real Deal magazine, is up against stiff
competition. The field is dominated locally by older, established real estate
professionals, like Jonathan Miller of the Matrix, who is the head of a major
appraisal company,; and Douglas Heddings of TrueGotham, a long-time broker.
Even Jonathan Butler of chief competitor Brownstoner used to run a hedge fund.
The big rivals are generally “written by people who are in the industry,” she
said. “They can write about how brokers work, or what the statistics say. We
have more of a laypersons’ approach.” But unlike bloggers of old, this Harvard
graduate is not above old-fashioned shoe-leather reporting, like the time she
trekked out to Greenpoint in November to watch a developer silence the gavel at
a major auction of new condominium units when early sales on units priced up to
$599,000 started selling in the $200,000s. Like the best bloggers, Mr. Steele
said, “she’s got the jaundiced eye, that I’m always looking for, but it’s not knee-jerk
negativity.”
* * *
No comments:
Post a Comment