“One of Gawker’s most cherished tags was ‘How Things Work,’ a rubric that applied to posts revealing the sausage-making, the secret ways that power manifests itself. The phrase has a children’s book feel to it, bringing to mind colorful illustrations of animals in human work clothes building houses o…”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“It’s difficult to recall now, but at Gawker’s founding there was a sense that the internet was a free space, where anything can be said. An island off the mainland, where people could be themselves. Where writers could say things that would get you fired in an instant from a print publication. Where…”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“awker did overextend itself, as an enterprise. We were internet exceptionalists, believing that that from blogs, forums and messaging would emerge a new world of unlimited freedom to associate and to express. We still believed we could, like the early bloggers, say everything.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“The chief rule of establishment journalism that it violated to its detriment, it seems, is the one that recommends against pissing off billionaires.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“For a site as reckless as it is purported to be, there have been no Jayson Blairs, no conflict-of-interest or plagiarism scandals, no career-ending corrections.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“The flip side of that fearlessness, the epithet that even our defenders throw at us, is recklessness. Gawker deliberately pushed the envelope, went further than our establishment forebears, and should be held responsible for the result. Did we invite this fate?”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“The greatest compliment one could ever pay to a Gawker writer is fearlessness—the willingness to say what needed to be said irrespective of the consequences.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“Privacy, especially internet privacy, had become the biggest challenge to freedom of expression. When time came to scurry under the shelter of the First Amendment, we did not have that much institutional support. You can’t easily get the privileges of the profession if you pour scorn on its luminari…”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“But even Gawker’s natural allies had no enthusiasm for a free press defense of a story about a sex tape. Journalists were aware of the public’s growing sensitivity to anything that could be characterized as revenge porn or cyber bullying.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“Gawker, which had been accused of unfairly caricaturing so many others, was itself undone by a few well-chosen quotes.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“Hogan was the most popular celebrity in Tampa. While a federal judge and a Florida appeals court panel found the story was solidly newsworthy because it touched a matter of public concern, it was always going to be a challenge to go up against Hogan against a home-town jury.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“At some point, however, Thiel’s stance hardened, after a friend advised him that he was the only one who could stop Gawker. He connected with Charles Harder, a Hollywood lawyer who had learned from Marty Singer but was ready to take a more hard-knuckled approach on behalf of clients. Litigation fina…”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“That Thiel had a boyfriend was already an open secret in the Valley and the San Francisco gay scene, but Thiel says he had a right to control the sequence of his coming out. That is also the most sympathetic rationale for his animus. But Valleywag also complicated Thiel’s business ventures, which is…”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“In my time at the company, I started Gizmodo first, and loved Lifehacker most, but Gawker was the only site I edited.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“Gawker shed an enormous amount of light. It punctured hypocrisy and mocked the ridiculous. The site put out 200,000 posts over its life, about thousands of public figures. Some say we made the right enemies, but everybody can agree: even for journalists, we certainly made a lot of them. One was Pete…”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“It was unsurprising that Gawker focused on the privileges of the princelings, the younger members of America’s increasingly hereditary elite. These were the manifestations, in stories readers could understand, of the dry income inequality that had become the focus of politics and economics.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“As if media players and celebrities were not enough, Gawker was, by the late 2000s, poking at some truly powerful people.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“It was a matter of pride that Gawker ran stories that could not be published elsewhere.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com
“Mockery, of course, is the cheapest and most available tool that the powerless have against the powerful; it has historically been the one thing that they can’t silence.”— Nick Denton, gawker.com