Deadspin’s Entire Staff Laid Off as G/O Media Sells Sports News Site to European Startup

Sports news and commentary Deadspin has been sold again — and its entire staff has been laid off.

Deadspin, once owned by Gawker Media, became part of G/O Media in 2019. In a memo to company staff Monday, G/O Media CEO Jim Spanfeller announced that Deadspin was sold to European firm Lineup Publishing.

With the sale, the staff of Deadspin is getting pink-slipped. “Deadspin’s new owners have made the decision to not carry over any of the site’s existing staff and instead build a new team more in line with their editorial vision for the brand,” Spanfeller wrote in the memo. “While the new owners plan to be reverential to Deadpin’s unique voice, they plan to take a different content approach regarding the site’s overall sports coverage. This unfortunately means that we will be parting ways with those impacted staff members, who were notified earlier today.”

Last fall, G/O Media shut down Jezebel after an unsuccessful attempt to sell the site. It was subsequently acquired by Atlanta-based Paste Magazine.

Per Spanfeller’s memo, Lineup Publishing “is a newly formed digital media company described in their words as ‘dedicated to creating, acquiring and managing high quality media brands across a variety of sectors.'” Spanfeller added, “I do want to make it clear that we were not actively shopping Deadspin. The rationale behind the decision to sell included a variety of important factors that include the buyer’s editorial plans for the brand, tough competition in the sports journalism sector, and a valuation that reflected a sizable premium from our original purchase price for the site.”

It’s not clear who’s behind Lineup Publishing or where the company is based. The only information on its website is a slogan that says “Engaging brands. With heaps of character” alongside a contact form. The bottom of the homepage includes the text “San Gwann, Malta,” which suggests the company is based in the island country located in the Mediterranean Sea.

A G/O Media rep referred inquiries to a PR email address for Lineup Publishing, which went unanswered.

In 2019, Spanfeller and private-equity firm Great Hill Partners acquired Gizmodo Media Group (previously part of Gawker Media) and The Onion from Univision to form G/O Media.

That same year, Deadspin’s previous staff resigned en masse in protest of the new management’s demand that staffers write only about sports. Spanfeller then hired Jim Rich, former editor in chief of the New York Daily News, to run Deadspin. Rich was promoted to editorial director of G/O Media before he exited in mid-2021 over his reported objection to “interference” by Spanfeller and other top company execs. In July 2023, Rich rejoined the company as Deadspin’s EIC.
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That same year, Deadspin’s previous staff resigned en masse in protest of the new management’s demand that staffers write only about sports.
> Get a job writing for a sports outlet.
> Cry that you're not allowed to sperg about Trump or muh isms and actually have to write about sports.

Sounds about right for these failed journalism majors that couldn't get a job in an news outlet so had to infest wherever they could go, so also games journalism.

I hope the injun kid and his family are laughing hard at the darkie who tried to get them banned and chesed down by a mob.
 
I hope the injun kid and his family are laughing hard at the darkie who tried to get them banned and chesed down by a mob.
Considering their lawsuit was probably the last straw in a long line of costly liability-inducing missteps, you could say that kid walked away with Deadspin's scalp..... good for him.
 
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It’s not clear who’s behind Lineup Publishing or where the company is based. The only information on its website is a slogan that says “Engaging brands. With heaps of character” alongside a contact form. The bottom of the homepage includes the text “San Gwann, Malta,” which suggests the company is based in the island country located in the Mediterranean Sea.
Tax write off? Money laundering front? Way of avoiding lawsuits and re-employing the same dead weight after pretending they were not getting brought with the company?

So many possibilities.
 
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