Gawker Retreats and Deletes Controversial Story

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NEW YORK — (CNN) Gawker did something unprecedented on Friday. The New York-based gossip site that typically revels in controversy removed a post that had prompted an avalanche of condemnations.

Nick Denton, the founder and chief executive of Gawker Media, said in a blog post that the company’s flagship site was wrong to publish a story about an alleged sexual solicitation by a married man who is the brother of a former Obama administration official. CNNMoney will not name the person at the center of the story, or the name of the former official.

“But the media environment has changed, our readers have changed, and I have changed,” Denton wrote in his post. “Not only is criticism of yesterday’s piece from readers intense, but much of what they’ve said has resonated. Some of our own writers, proud to work at one of the only independent media companies, are equally appalled.”

Denton said the story’s removal marked the first time the site has “removed a significant news story for any reason other than factual error or legal settlement.”

The company’s managing partnership voted 5-1 to remove the post, with executive editor Tommy Craggs casting the lone dissenting vote. Craggs helped edit the story, which was written by Gawker reporter Jordan Sargent. Editorial staff members were apparently united in their opposition to the story’s removal.

According to Gawker reporter J.K. Trotter, every member of Gawker Media’s editorial leadership “strenuously protested removing the post.”

Shortly after the story was published on Thursday, Gawker editor-in-chief Max Read tweeted that the site “will always report on married c-suite executives of major media companies f*cking around on their wives.”

After the story was taken down on Friday, Gawker’s executive editor for investigations John Cook said the decision to remove the story was a “mistake.” He said it was “solidly in line with what Gawker has asked its writers and editors to do for years.”

Outside the Gawker newsroom, however, the reaction to the article’s publication had been almost universally negative. Even avowed fans of the site denounced the story.

“I’m a fan of Gawker & several of its journalists, but that article is reprehensible beyond belief: it’s deranged to publish that,” tweeted Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Glenn Greenwald. In an article published Friday on The Intercept, Greenwald said that Read’s justification was “utterly laughable, and it’s grounded in a premise that is very common when people want to wallow in others’ private lives, yet incredibly toxic.”

The controversy arrives at a potentially delicate time for Gawker Media, which was founded by Denton in 2002.

The company is facing an invasion of privacy lawsuit for publishing portions of a sex tape involving the former professional wrestler Hulk Hogan. Hogan, whose real name is Terry Bollea, is seeking $100 million in damages.

Gawker’s legal team argues that publication of the salacious footage is protected by the First Amendment, noting that Hogan is a public figure who had made his sexual exploits a matter of public record.

For Denton, the Hogan tape satisfied his own personal standards.

“I have a simple editorial litmust test, which is: is it true, and is it interesting?” Denton told Capital New York last month.

But in what was an uncharacteristic about-face, Denton said Friday the deleted story “does not rise to the level that our flagship site should be publishing.”

“The point of the story was not in my view sufficient to offset the embarrassment to the subject and his family,” Denton wrote

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2015 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

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