Disaster Newsweek in Chaos as Top Editors, Reporters Fired and New York Staff Sent Home - Things Just Keep Getting W̶o̶r̶s̶e̶ Better

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Newsweek Media Group fired editor-in-chief Bob Roe and executive editor Ken Li Monday. Additionally, TheWrap has learned that the publication has parted ways with the top reporters of its investigations unit, including Celeste Katz and Josh Saul. Josh O’Keefe, a reporter for Newsweek’s affiliated International Business Times, was also dismissed.

In an email to employees late Monday, company CEO Dev Pragad announced that IBT Managing Editor Nancy Cooper would take up leadership as “acting editor” of Newsweek.

The company suggested that employees who were not fired go home Monday — potentially without pay — though few complied, TheWrap has learned. And several other staffers, including veteran political reporter Matthew Cooper, resigned on Monday.

The staff turmoil comes amid questions about the media company’s financial viability amid legal woes over sexual harassment and questions about the veracity of its online traffic.

“IBT employees were not paid last night,” a current Newsweek employee told TheWrap. “They claimed we were about to get paid by 3 and 5 today and if we don’t get paid by 5 I am going to lead the f—ing revolution.”

Company management fired “everyone on that investigative team and a ‘payroll error’ last night means nobody in the company got paid,” said the employee. “They are apparently in a ‘work stoppage’ and being sent home for the day.”

As the Daily Beast reported, members of the Newsweek investigations unit had written several pieces critical of the company in recent days, something an internal source within the company suggested was related to today’s actions.

“They were all independently working on a story about ‘the Church,’ a.k.a. our owners,” said the employee.

A second Newsweek insider said a general panic had swept remaining employees.

“We were told that we were ‘welcome to go home’ earlier today, but no one has left. Everyone is downloading their articles off the website, talking with their sources and transferring their work contacts. The unofficial general agreement is to stay for more information but not work at all. There is alcohol out and most people are just comforting each other,” said the individual.

“The idea of walking out on the job in response to our owners firing Bob and Ken was briefly discussed.”

A rep for Newsweek Media Group, which oversees both IBT and Newsweek, has not responded to TheWrap’s request for comment.

On Friday, Newsweek’s chairman, Etienne Uzac, and his wife, finance director Marion Kim, both left the company after a report in BuzzFeed said that the media company had engaged in ad fraud and used dodgy tactics to artificially increase traffic.

Last month, Newsweek’s office was raided by the NYPD and the Manhattan District Attorney’s office for reasons that remain unclear. Employees at the time reported that officers had been taking pictures of computer servers.

Also last month, the company’s chief content officer, Dayan Candappa, was placed on leave after sexual misconduct accusations at a previous employer surfaced.
https://www.thewrap.com/newsweek-fallout-top-editors-reporters-fired/

A whole plethora of editors and journalists were fired at Newsweek, and now a bunch of them are sitting around the offices crying and getting drunk and threatening to lead a revolution. Coming on the heels of that event a few weeks prior where they were raided by the NYPD, I'm growing increasingly interested as to what exactly is happening over there.

I wish I could say that I sympathized, but after seeing repeated examples concerning what sorts of stories they insist on publishing, I find that difficult to do.
 
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In b4 the "Literally shaking, Trump is killing free speech! He is a dictator!" tweets start to roll in, as well as the usual dimbulbs screeching about the death of Newsweek all the while gleefully admitting that they haven't read the publication in well over a decade.

For me, Newsweek started to feel out of touch right about the time people were able read news online instead of on printed page, and the only times I may have picked one up was while in some waiting room. I have no love lost for this publication.
 
From USA Today:
Just last week the co-owner and chairman of Newsweek Media Group, Etienne Uzac, and his wife Marion Kim, who acted as the company's finance director, both stepped down.

The Manhattan District Attorney's office raided the company's offices last month. Katz reported that the raid was part of a long-running investigation into the company's finances.

Last week, BuzzFeed News reported that the company engaged in “fraudulent online traffic practices” to help secure an online ad buy from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The publisher of Newsweek and the International Business Times bought fake audience traffic in order to fulfill a large government advertising campaign, consulting firm Social Puncher alleged.
Newsweek outlet charged with inflating users for ads

Staffers tweeted Monday that the issue boils down to reckless management and seeking web clicks at the expense of integrity.

So the police raid was part of a fraud investigation involving fake clicks on government ads. Add this to Twitter suddenly knocking off fake followers and it starts to make you think.
 
From USA Today:


So the police raid was part of a fraud investigation involving fake clicks on government ads. Add this to Twitter suddenly knocking off fake followers and it starts to make you think.

Who would believe that there would be corruption and conspiracy between journalists and political players wanting primo media play, it must just be incompetence!

Really though, you're going to see a lot more of this kind of thing over the next year. They may not be as obvious as Newsweek's downfall, they'll downsize instead, go online only, feed more stories through that are from other publications on their sites, band together as more networks and less of a stand alone publication. More people are awake to their nonsense and less people are buying their tripe in physical form.
 
From USA Today:


So the police raid was part of a fraud investigation involving fake clicks on government ads. Add this to Twitter suddenly knocking off fake followers and it starts to make you think.
This is brilliant. They didn't just bot views, they used the ads in pop-ups on torrent sites. Fucking wow

"The fake users were bought because IBTimes.com was losing traffic from real readers, the report alleges. Instead, the traffic came from pop-up or pop-under browser windows on other websites where users could illegally download videos or other files."
 
Who would believe that there would be corruption and conspiracy between journalists and political players wanting primo media play, it must just be incompetence!

Really though, you're going to see a lot more of this kind of thing over the next year. They may not be as obvious as Newsweek's downfall, they'll downsize instead, go online only, feed more stories through that are from other publications on their sites, band together as more networks and less of a stand alone publication. More people are awake to their nonsense and less people are buying their tripe in physical form.

Between this, Wells Fargo and Twitter, is Trump somehow actually draining the swamp? It's like a politician actually doing what they say they will, it's kinda weird.
 
This is as crystal clear a case as you're going to see of a shady journalistic source giving up ethics and the obligation to truth in favor of divisive sensationalism and rabble-rousing partisanship and getting called out for it by rebellious employees who themselves still possess a sense of ethics. It just makes me feel sad that all the diehard lefty shills will blame Trump and the alright bogeyman for "hurting free speech" and won't think critically any further than that for no better reason than that they also don't believe in honesty or ethics and only care that Newsweek is "on their side" and therefore perceive this as a win for the evil republicans.
 
fake clicks on government ads
lol they got sweet government money contracts and couldn't even be bothered to hire Indians to click on the ads for them

Also I'd love to hear more about the deals surrounding these government ads running in their political publication.
 
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