The Cowardice of Nick Denton
Posted on July 18th, 2015 in Uncategorized | 19 Comments »
I don’t need to say much about why Gawker’s recent post outing a married, male publishing executive was disgusting. It’s already been said: The man wasn’t a public figure, Gawker allowed itself to be complicit in a blackmail scheme, and exposing the private conflict of a man just because he works at a publishing company you don’t like, or is the brother of a financier you don’t like—or just for buzz, or clicks—is indefensible.
But you know all that already.
No, what really gets me is the pusillanimous statement by Gawker owner Nick Denton explaining why he and the the majority of the board that runs Gawker decided to take the post down.
Because Denton refuses to take responsibility for a post that has just destroyed a man’s life. Instead, he argues, the fault lies in the shifting standards of the Internet.
Here’s how he makes this disgraceful argument.
He begins by saying, well, look, this story we posted wasn’t really so bad.
First, he calls it “an editorial close call,” which it shouldn’t have been.
Then he adds,
The story involves extortion, illegality and reckless behavior, sufficient justification at least in tabloid news terms. The account was true and well-reported. It concerns a senior business executive at one of the most powerful media companies on the planet.
This is disingenuous. The story did involve extortion, yes. But Denton should have acknowledged that, by publishing the story, Gawker was complicit in that extortion. The story did “involve” illegality, but no illegality actually occurred except perhaps for the extortion that Gawker facilitated; the executive in question did not actually meet the escort. And while it is true that reckless behavior is a story for tabloids, Denton omits a key fact; that reckless behavior has to be conducted by public people to make it “newsworthy” and legally defensible. The man in question was not a public individual, despite him being (gasp) a “senior business executive”—Gawker code words for “easy target”—at “one of the most powerful media companies” on the planet. These are the buzzwords of desperate rationalization.
Denton continues: “In the early days of the Internet, that would have been enough.”
I’m not so sure that’s true—I don’t remember Matt Drudge, for example, ever outing a private person—but in any case it’s an asinine argument. It’s a bit like saying, “Well, we shot a man in the back for no reason because in the Wild West you could get away with that.” The fact that you can get away with something is no excuse for bad behavior.
More:
But the media environment has changed, our readers have changed, and I have changed. 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. I believe this public mood reflects a growing recognition that we all have secrets, and they are not all equally worthy of exposure.
There is a factual inaccuracy here and a fallacy. The factual inaccuracy is to posit that there was a time when publishing a vicious story about the personal life of a private man would have been socially or journalistically sanctioned, but that standards are now changing.
(This is not to say that such stories were never published; it is to say that no serious journalist would ever have tried to justify them.)
The fallacy is that Gawker’s only mistake was not to recognize these allegedly shifting sands of public taste. No. Gawker’s mistake was to publish a hateful piece of journalism because a) it thinks this man is powerful, and it doesn’t like powerful people, and b) to make money.
This is not about some larger cultural change, some macro-trend that Gawker—which prides itself on setting trends, not following them—was, oops, late to detect. This is about human decency and the responsible use of power. And it’s about taking responsibility for a mistake, rather than fobbing it off on changing tastes.
Denton’s refusal to take responsibility continues as he obfuscates about the damage that Gawker’s post has done.
The point of this story was not in my view sufficient to offset the embarrassment to the subject and his family, he says. And a few sentences later: This action will not turn back the clock. XXXXXXX’s embarrassment will not be eased.
[The “XXXX”s are mine. It’s a symbolic gesture, obviously, because everybody knows the man’s name. But I can’t stomach writing it just because Gawker did.)
Let’s think about that word, “embarrassment,” what it means and what it doesn’t mean, because it’s important; it’s what Denton suggests, twice, is the consequence of this post. If you fart in an elevator, you’re “embarrassed.” If you mispronounce a common word, you’re “embarrassed.” If you realize at the end of a day that you’ve been walking around with your fly open, you’re “embarrassed.”
So, no—this media executive isn’t “embarrassed.” I don’t know him, so the following are simply possibilities, but he could be “shamed.” He could be “humiliated.” He could be “ruined” or “destroyed.”
He is married; his marriage may now be over.
He has children. What will their lives be like when they show up at school on Monday? What would Denton or Gawker editor Max Read, who published the story and still defends it, say to them?
To say that he is “embarrassed” is an insult to decency, and an act of cowardice. Nick Denton published something that may have destroyed a man’s life; this is the kind of violation that people commit suicide over. To say that it caused him “embarrassment” is an act of cowardice.
Why is it so hard to take responsibility? To say, “We were wrong—really wrong—and we apologize.”
In the end, Denton can not resist a bit of self-congratulation.
As we go forward, we will hew to our mission of reporting and publishing important stories that our competitors are too timid, or self-consciously upright, to pursue.
Too timid? Too self-consciously upright?
Fuck you, Nick Denton. The reason other journalists don’t publish such stories is not because we’re timid or “self-consciously upright.” We don’t publish them because they hurt people for no valid reason.
Denton’s last words:
…this decision will establish a clear standard for future stories. It is not enough for them simply to be true. They have to reveal something meaningful. They have to be true and interesting. These texts were interesting, but not enough, in my view.
This is incoherent and intellectually un-serious thought. Many people would have said that the story in question was “interesting,” and it appears to be true. So Denton has just created a standard that justifies the post he’s just removed from his site.
There is a bit of good news here. The backlash against this post, and against Gawker, has been really encouraging. The vast majority of commenters on its site are as appalled as I am about the post.
Rolling Stone has suffered tangible harm from its publication of a deliberately false story about a deliberately false accusation of rape. There may be a price to pay for Gawker too.
19 Responses
7/18/2015 1:48 pm
Not for nothing, but I have it on good authority that Denton has a thing for goats. Let’s keep that on the DL.
7/18/2015 2:37 pm
“but [no] illegality actually occurred”
“tabloids, but Denton” [strike “but’]
“because a) it thinks” [move “because” after “a)”
7/18/2015 2:49 pm
[…] Source: https://richardbradley.net/shotsinthedark/2015/07/18/the-cowardice-of-nick-denton/ […]
7/18/2015 4:05 pm
Thanks for this post, Richard. It’s dead on.
7/18/2015 4:42 pm
Richard;
A great post and analysis, but I fear you missed the highly likely upshot of this latest Gawkerism.
But, yes, Fuck you Nick Denton and Gawker Media. I can only hope that the “corporate veil” of Gawker Media is lifted in the near future and each of the partners becomes financially liable for what they have done here and in the past few years.
I should note that I have no connection to Conde Nast, aside from regularly reading ArsTechnica.com. Nor do I read Gawker, Reddit, and have watched something less than 15 minutes of “professional” wrestling. Indeed, Gawker, Reddit and wrestling are, to my eyes, prime examples of “junk culture.” I am quite happy that the First Amendment protects them, because that means that legitimate sources of news, information and entertainment are similarly protected as well.
Let me explain what I see as the real point here, starting with a startling point in recent history.
On the morning of September 11, 2011, as the first plane owned and operated by United Airlines and American Airlines hit buildings, both companies became instantly insolvent. Both airlines had contracted with third parties to handle passenger screening and those companies became instantly insolvent as well. Why? Because even if they were ultimately “only” adjudged to have been negligent in civil suits, the likely (not just potential) liabilities greatly exceeded the sum of each company’s net worth and their insurance coverage. If they had been adjudged to have been more than negligent, the moment that verdict came in, they would have also had to pay back to their insurance carriers the cost of their legal defense up to that point. This is why, in large part, we now have the Transportation Security Administration handling passenger screening, all airlines were offered ‘bailouts’ and those of us with business insurance policies have to pay for mandatory “terrorism” coverage.
Despite not being a user of Gawker’s crap and having a strong disinterest in wrestling, in recent weeks I have become alarmed reading about Hulk Hogan (nee, Terry Bollea) suing Gawker Media, with the trial scheduled now to begin on October 1.
I will only provide a precis of the facts of the case, because the fact pattern resonates with the fact pattern of the Conde Nast CFO situation. Another exemplar of “junk culture”, the “disc” jockey known as “Bubba the Love Sponge” apparently recorded Terry Bollea having sex with “Bubba’s” then-wife and the tape also, I am told, included “Bubba’s” explicit oral assent for T. Bollea and the now-ex doing the dirty.
When presented with a copy of the “tape,” Gawker rationalized a reason to present 100 seconds of the encounter on one or more of their web sites. The “fastidious” Nick Denton rationalized that Hulk Hogan’s sanctimonious profession of “family values” in public was at odds with Terry Bollea’s private behavior as shown on the tape.
Just like in the instant case, this presumes that Nick Denton and Gawker are god-like and able to know the “details” of everyone’s (or at least the Victims Of Gawkers) marital agreements. Terry Bollea, despite being a public figure, sued. I see also that Clark Johnson (whoever that is) is also threatening a similar suit, challenging the factual basis of what Gawker has written about him.
If the above set of facts didn’t bring into question whether Gawker Media and Mr. Denton are self-destructive in running their business, his recent statements about the case “seal the deal.” Most business people are loath to tell anyone, even their closest friends, the limits of their insurance coverage, for tactical and strategic reasons. One example is that if a potential litigant knows your insurance coverage is 1 million, they will sue you for at least 1,000,001 to cause you problems at the outset with your insurance carrier.
In recent weeks, Nick Denton has been QUOTED saying that Gawker Media has exceeded the limits on its insurance coverage before the lawsuit has even gone before a jury and is now paying its legal expenses out-of-pocket. He hints that if they lose the lawsuit, they might have to seek outside investment. Apparently, he doesn’t realize that only fools will invest in an insolvent company.
I know not the details of Gawker’s insurance coverage, but having previously negotiated insurance coverage for a media enterprise, I know that for media organizations, in addition to normal limits, there generally is a limit on what an insurance carrier will pay out on an annual basis. Thus, I posit that if any other litigation is filed this year, Gawker will be paying for those actions out-of-pocket.
If Conde Nast and Gawker are already feuding, this “latest outrage,” it seems to me, if it is reduced to a lawsuit, say by Conde Nast against Gawker, will make Gawker instantaneously insolvent.
While the person who Gawker blackmailed in the instant matter seems to be a private person, I think a good case can be made that “actual malice” was involved in Gawker publishing the blackmail piece. I strongly suspect that Gawker doesn’t have insurance coverage that covers them aiding and abetting blackmail. Indeed, no insurance can ever be provided for “deliberate acts.” And, this blackmailing by Gawker sounds quite deliberate.
I also note that the person that Gawker apparently blackmailed denies sending any text messages to the porn slag. (I doubt there are any porn “stars” these days.) This point excites me, since disprovable facts are in play here. There might be many ways to fake a text message. One that I know of is to send out a text message using Google Voice. I’m not sure that a two-way text conversation can be maintained in this way, but applying that against the article would require me to read the article, and I simply haven’t looked at Gawker in years.
Wouldn’t it be ironic if Hulk Hogan and Advance Publications end up owning Gawker media through adverse possession?
7/18/2015 10:08 pm
This is a good post, though it still buys into the idea that the exec was “outed” etc. I reckon (as another commenter has noted) that this will quickly be revealed as a big blackmailing lie (faked texts etc) that Gawker turned into a giant bomb … and the pain and damage will have been done, and no amount of $$$ can compensate for it … plus the many who have named the exec and talked about his “outing”. So much for Denton’s weasel words: ‘We put truths on the internet.’ No, you don’t.
7/19/2015 1:07 am
The explanation sounds a lot like the one Keller gave for the NY Times when it wrote about a secret anti-terror banking campaign that had been working and about which the Times admitted there had been no abuses. Keller’s only explanation for helping terrorists and putting American servicemen in greater danger was to say that the Pentagon Papers gave them the right. But of course, the right wasn’t the issue. The issue was why he wanted to harm America. And to that his only response was that Bush was prez. Apparently just fine to help terrorists and harm the USA if Bush is prez.
7/19/2015 4:49 am
Wasn’t it also a story about the CFO of a *rival* media company?
7/19/2015 8:09 am
Spud Hosnick —
I’m not sure I understand how Gawker becomes complicit in blackmail here simply because they did an utterly despicable thing, but even if Hulk Hogan and Advance Publications / Conde Nast end up owning Gawker media, it likely would be of no value to them… they simply don’t know how to run a smut rag pandering to the basest of vile interests.
Dan —
Calling Advance Publications / Conde Nast and Gawker rivals stretches even the loosest use of the word (I understand ‘rival’ is not your description). Perhaps it is meant by the fact that their respective owners and (presumably most of) their employers come from the liberal side of the political spectrum?
7/19/2015 11:33 am
Interested Observer —
Blackmail requires the threat of actual publicity for it to work. It’s not Journalism 101, but more like Journalism 201 that you don’t get involved in failed or actual blackmail attempts. Nor do you work with, or give anonymity to the attempted blackmailer. Giving anonymity to the attempted/actual blackmailer is just one aspect of Gawker’s complicity here.
As for “competition,” in no rational universe is Conde Nast a competitor of Gawker. The proper analysis, however, concentrates on who Gawker sees as their competitors and adversaries. That would include Reddit, Conde Nast and a few others.
7/19/2015 6:58 pm
Spud Hosnick —
Thanks for the explanation.
In some ways, to quote Yogi Berra, this is Rolling Stone / UVA deja vu all over again. The editorial department at Gawker all have their shorts in a knot over the business side of the house pulling a take-down, but it seems like editorial didn’t do their legal homework. Perhaps they should be thanking their business counterparts for trying to save their asses, to say nothing of their jobs, instead of whining about interference in editorial matters.
.
7/19/2015 8:41 pm
“He is married; his marriage may now be over.”
More or less due to his action of soliciting a gay escort. That action probably should end his marriage. It can be argued that the revelation of that act potentially saved his family from more eventual future heartache , and may have prevented his wife from contracting an STD.
If the story is false, then shame on Gawker. But if it is as it seems, vetted and true- then the preponderance of blame for any consequences to the marriage would seem to fall to his act, not the revelation of it.
7/20/2015 3:07 pm
PennToth - I have two problems with that argument.
First, it’s difficult to see any public interest in this story, even if it’s true, beyond pure salaciousness. The subject of it isn’t a public figure. He’s not an elected official. He’s not even an executive at a public company - his employer is privately held. As Erik Wemple published in his blog at the Washington Post, a Nexis search of this individual’s name turns about a minimal number of mentions, which are basically press releases about changing jobs. This article feels like it’s motivated by pure animus, perhaps including nothing more mature than some staffers at Gawker being upset that they’ve been turned down for jobs at Conde Nast publications or that Conde Nast executives are better paid than them.
Second, who knows if the story is true? The executive denies it - and he’d obviously be motivated to do so even if it’s true. The source, however, is a gay escort who admittedly was trying to blackmail the executive to extort a favor. And Gawker facilitated that extortion, while maintaining the blackmailer’s anonymity in its original story. And here’s how The Daily Beast reports on the escort / blackmailer: “In an interview with the Daily Caller, [the blackmailer] —who has posted videos claiming that Barack Obama is “the son of the Devil” and the 9/11 attacks were carried out by the Russians—spouted a variety of conspiracy theories concerning the well-connected [executive’s] family.”
So, combine that points 1 and 2, and Gawker is not only running a story of dubious newsworthiness but doing so based on a source with obvious credibility issues.
7/20/2015 3:47 pm
The story was peddled to Gawker by a grifter who trafficks in crackpot conspiracy theories. It’s grossly amusing that the lot of you accept it at face value and this creature Denton is maintaining his game face on the issue.
7/20/2015 3:57 pm
Just to recall, the metropolitan daily in Spokane, Wa. twisted itself into knots 15 years ago to justify publishing unflattering confidential information about the city’s AC-DC mayor. The information was obtained with the use of an agent provacateur, it was embellished with bogus claims that the mayor had molested youngsters 23 years earlier, and the reporter in question clearly had it in for the mayor to begin with. They knew they were engaged in skeezy activity, hence all the casuistry.
7/21/2015 7:19 am
Wow. Gawker’s source is something else. Thanks for the heads up on that, Dave T & Art Deco, I hadn’t heard about any of that.
So the whole thing may indeed turn out to have been an elaborate fabrication by ‘Ryan’, or possibly even somebody else who used him as a dupe given his extensive predilection for wild conspiracy theories.
Other outlets instantly turned up all this stuff on the blackmailer & Gawker went to press without doing any checking at all? His FB page wasn’t a neon-flashing caution sign to them?
I feel a little better about what these slimeballs did to Geithner’s kids, since they will probably OWN all of Gawker media lock stock & barrel when this is all over.
In the meantime Heather Whatsername who works as counsel for Gawker & not only signed off on all this story with a very iffy source, but voted to keep the story up even after the universal uproar about Gawker’s complicity in blackmail (by serving as the threat enforcer in an extortion scheme against an employee of a Gawker competitor, no less) should have her law degree revoked on grounds of Extreme Malpractice.
7/22/2015 12:15 pm
you missed the angle I think a lot of the media is ignoring — that Gawker’s target was an executive of a company Gawker considers a rival, and in fact one it was in a bit of a feud with (e.g. Reddit). This is worse than a random outing for clicks — it is (in the words of the Watergate era) a ratf*cking of a competitor.
7/24/2015 4:07 pm
The Gawker article is described in my children’s school quite succinctly. It is called bullying. This kind of journalism teaches our society that bullying is acceptable with the right twisted education. And the next time a 15 year old takes their own, short, sad life because of bullying, I won’t be able to help myself but hold Gawker implicit - if only because they have made a business monetizing and promoting cruelty.
7/24/2015 4:09 pm
I meant twisted justification not education and complicit not implicit.