TBD was a local news site serving the Washington, D.C., area. It was owned by Allbritton Communications, owner of Politico and the local TV station WJLA, and headquartered in Arlington, Va.
TBD launched in August 2010 as a general-interest community news site. After an abrupt staff reduction in February 2011, it was scaled back to an arts and entertainment-focused niche site. Though TBD still operated under the WJLA banner for another year and a half, most media watchers mark 2011’s layoffs as “the death of TBD.” TBD’s last dedicated staff member left in June 2012, and the site was shut down two months later.
Plans for TBD were first announced in fall 2009. Jim Brady, a former AOL staffer and former head of the Washington Post’s website, would run the as-yet-unnamed outlet. The site was seen as a test of the long-term journalistic viability of web-native, engagement-focused, and aggregation-oriented community news. (And since the site also leveraged the resources of WJLA through its TV station, TBD-TV, it was also seen as a test of the potential for web-TV hybrid sites.) As the Huffington Post’s Jack Mirkinson put it in August 2010, given the news industry’s search for new economic and journalistic models, “TBD is something of a canary in the coal mine.”
TBD also hired Erik Wemple, former head of the Washington City Paper, as its top editor, and Steve Buttry as its director of community engagement. The team hired a group of journalists to act as “community hosts,” interacting with residents through both social media and in-person meetups and events. In April 2010, the site announced that its working title — TBD — would become its official title. “TBD will never be a finished product,” its editors wrote in a blog post. “On the web, on mobile devices and on our 24-hours cable news channel, we’ll always be in motion: constantly updating, improving and evolving; seeking more details, reaction or community conversation. We’ll be a place you visit to watch the news unfold in real time.”