The Denver Post

The Messenger, a media startup, aims to build a newsroom fast

- By Benjamin Mullin The New York Times

Jimmy Finkelstei­n’s winding career in publishing has included running and being a part- owner of The Hollywood Reporter and The Hill, a middlemark­et chronicler of Washington politics. In 2021, he sold The Hill to the broadcast giant Nexstar for $ 130 million.

But neither of those journalist­ic ventures was nearly as big as what Finkelstei­n, 74, is envisionin­g for what he’s calling his last major act in the media industry.

In May, he plans to introduce The Messenger, a news site that will cover politics, business, entertainm­ent and sports. Financed with $ 50 million in investor money, the site will start with at least 175 journalist­s stationed in New York, Washington and Los Angeles, executives say. But in a year, Finkelstei­n said, he plans to have around 550 journalist­s, about as many as The Los Angeles Times.

The goal, Finkelstei­n said in his first extended interview about the new business, is creating an alternativ­e to a national news media that he says has come under the sway of partisan influences. The site will be free and supported by advertisin­g, with an events business to follow.

“I remember an era where you’d sit by the TV, when I was a kid with my family, and we’d all watch ‘ 60 Minutes’ together,” said Finkelstei­n, who comes from a wealthy New York publishing family. “Or we all couldn’t wait to get the next issue of Vanity Fair or whatever other magazine you were interested in. Those days are over, and the fact is, I want to help bring those days back.”

Finkelstei­n cited what he described as CNN’S limited coverage of the southern U. S. border and Fox News’ downplayin­g of the Capitol riot as the type of coverage he would like to address.

“I find that bias in the news is not so much what the people report, but what they don’t report,” he said. “So it’s really a question of not commission, but omission.”

Under his leadership, The Hill was accused of bias itself — as a conduit for conspiracy theories about Ukraine and President Joe Biden’s family that were seized upon by former President Donald Trump. The Hill published a lengthy review of some of its work on the topic and added editor’s notes to many of its columns, noting that some failed to provide important details about sources and may have left readers unsure of whether the work was news reporting or opinion writing.

Finkelstei­n acknowledg­ed that he and Trump

had known each other socially for decades, adding that he’s friendly with Democrats, too. And he defended The Hill, saying independen­t studies determined that readers think the publicatio­n is “balanced and nonpartisa­n.”

Dan Wakeford, a former top editor of People Magazine, will oversee the newsroom. Wakeford has hired Marty Kady, a longtime senior editor at Politico, to be The Messenger’s politics editor, and Mary Margaret,

a former top editor of Entertainm­ent Weekly, to direct entertainm­ent coverage.

Wakeford said The Messenger would explore many sides of an issue — “polyperspe­ctivity,” he said — and wouldn’t ignore any perspectiv­es or opinions.

Finkelstei­n’s backers include Josh Harris, cofounder of the privateequ­ity giant Apollo; James Tisch, chief executive of the financial conglomera­te Loews; and Thomas Peterffy,

founder and chairman of the trading platform Interactiv­e Brokers. Harris owned the majority of The Hill, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The Messenger will be starting during a difficult ad market. Media companies like The Washington Post, News Corp and Vox Media have cut staff in the last year, some citing a fall in advertisin­g revenue.

Richard Beckman, a former president of The Hill and Conde Nast who will be The Messenger’s president, said in an interview that the company planned to generate more than $ 100 million in revenue next year, primarily through advertisin­g and events, with profitabil­ity expected that year.

To build its digital audience, the company has hired Neetzan Zimmerman, who has been a digital traffic maven at The Hill and Gawker Media, and is expecting more than 100 million monthly readers — an ambitious goal that would make it one of the most- read digital publicatio­ns in the United States.

In the interview, Beckman pitched The Messenger with a sizzle reel featuring the Dire Straits hit “Money for Nothing,” saying he hoped the publicatio­n’s colorful writing, compelling visuals and in- depth reporting would make its audience “fall in love” with media again.

Finkelstei­n said starting The Messenger wasn’t his first idea after selling The Hill. He also tried to buy The Miami Herald, banking on Florida as an increasing­ly important state. But Mcclatchy, which owns the newspaper, wasn’t interested in selling to him.

“I really want to do something that changes journalism a bit and changes America for the good,” he said.

 ?? VALERIE PLESCH — THE NEW YORK ?? Jimmy Finkelstei­n, center, the media entreprene­ur behind The Hill, with Richard Beckman, left, and Dan Wakeford in Washington on March 7. Finkelstei­n is starting an ambitious new media venture called The Messenger covering politics, entertainm­ent and business, with Wakeford and Beckman.
VALERIE PLESCH — THE NEW YORK Jimmy Finkelstei­n, center, the media entreprene­ur behind The Hill, with Richard Beckman, left, and Dan Wakeford in Washington on March 7. Finkelstei­n is starting an ambitious new media venture called The Messenger covering politics, entertainm­ent and business, with Wakeford and Beckman.

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