Jordan Hoffman
Quixotic News Startup The Messenger Is Shutting Down Richard Beckman, Jimmy Finkelstein, and Dan Wakeford in March 2023. Photo: Valerie Plesch/The New York Times/REDUX The Messenger, a much-hyped digital-news outlet whose founder promised it would bring down-the-middle news to a supposedly enormous market, shut down after less than a year. The company boasted $50 million in initial funding, but serious doubts about its financial future had been swirling for weeks, with CEO Jimmy Finkelstein attempting to raise enough money to keep it alive. On Wednesday, the New York Times reported that the company was abruptly closing up shop. This was apparently news to many employees, including the outlet's editor-in-chief. In short order, The Messenger's Slack was disconnected, leaving employees in the dark about continuing health benefits and other basic information. With the company out of money, laid-off workers reportedly will not be receiving severance. In a message to staff, Finkelstein, former owner of The Hill, pinned the blame for the company's demise on the tough economic environment for news: The Messenger employed about 300 people, many of them poached from legacy media outlets and paid generous salaries. But its everything-for-everyone mission, as advertised by Finkelstein, always seemed nebulous, and management and financial troubles hampered it from the start. A dependence on social media and digital ads, two sectors of the news business that have been in recent decline, didn't help. And Finkelstein did have a point with his note: The Messenger's timing could hardly have been worse. The media world has already seen a catastrophic January, with widespread layoffs at outlets big and small. According to Axios, The Messenger made only $3 million in revenue in 2023 while spending $8 million on office space. Quixotic News Startup The Messenger Is Shutting Down
42%
The Daily's Verdict
This author has a poor reputation for journalistic standards and is not considered a reliable news source.
Bias
50%
Examples:
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- Someone has to review Bob Marley: One Love
- Toni Collette was trending
Conflicts of Interest
0%
Examples:
No current examples available.
Contradictions
100%
Examples:
- The author claims pride in their work at The Messenger but then goes on to say time-consuming reporting or rich critical essays were less valued by upper management. This contradicts themselves and suggests they did not have freedom to get creative with how they wanted to cover movies as promised.
Deceptions
80%
Examples:
- Billionaires Are Journalism's False Saviors
- Killing The Messenger: My Final Days Working at a Disaster
- The Media Apocalypse
Recent Articles
The Messenger: A Digital News Startup's Failed Attempt to Raise Funding and Shutdown
Broke On: Saturday, 03 February 2024The Messenger, a digital news startup launched with $50 million in funding last May, failed to raise the necessary funds and lost tens of millions of dollars. Despite bringing in around $3 million in revenue last year.