Gawker Media is a New York-based network of blogs founded and owned by Nick Denton.
Gawker Media was founded in 2002 by Denton, a Financial Times veteran, with the gadget blog Gizmodo. The company’s flagship blog, Gawker, was founded later that year as a New York media and gossip blog. The company quickly expanded into a network of subject-specific blogs, including the sports blog Deadspin, the gaming blog Kotaku, and the science fiction blog io9.
Gawker Media’s largest sites were Gizmodo and Lifehacker, with an estimated monthly global reach of over 6 million each as of May 2011, according to Quantcast. Gawker drew about 105 million unique monthly visitors across its network as of 2014. Jezebel and Kotaku receive the most comments. Gawker had about 120 full-time staffers across its blogs in 2014, with plans to expand to 150 by the end of the year.
Gawker Media is one of the most popular blog networks on the web and has been estimated as the most valuable. Gawker’s advertising revenue and audience consistently grew for several years beginning in 2007 after remaining stagnant for about two years. In 2010, its focus shifted from pageviews to unique visitors in an effort to emphasize new readers and original reporting. In 2013, Gawker expected to bring in about 10% of its revenue from e-commerce, through links in articles to items to purchase.
Gawker has launched local versions of its sites in Brazil, Hungary, and the United Kingdom, with plans to expand into India and China as well.
Gawker sites have been instrumental in defining writing for the web, orienting it toward profit, opinion, and celebrity. Gawker articles are often short, snarky, and focused on exposing hypocrisy or upending conventional wisdom, a formula that has become “the de facto voice of blogs today.”
During its early years, Gawker largely covered New York-oriented media gossip with the tone of an irreverent upstart, though in the mid-2000s it shifted toward a mass-appeal focus and included more celebrity photos, videos, and stories. Gawker Media has been mentioned as a modern-day successor to yellow journalism, and it has eschewed many traditional journalistic values.