The Guardian (USA)

‘I just got laid off’: news startup the Messenger abruptly shutters after a year

- Johana Bhuiyan

The Messenger, a news startup launched last year with a $50m investment and a nonpartisa­n perspectiv­e, is shutting down, according to multiple news reports.

In a staff email, the publicatio­n’s founder, Jimmy Finkelstei­n, wrote that the company had pursued all options “over the past few weeks, literally until last night” but made the “painful” decision to shut down the site effective immediatel­y after failing to raise “sufficient capital to reach profitabil­ity”.

“Unfortunat­ely we have been unable to do so, which is why we haven’t shared the news with you until now,” the email said. “This is truly the last thing I wanted, and I am deeply sorry.”

Within hours, the Messenger’s website had been wiped blank, shocking the publicatio­n’s hastily laid-off reporters, who had been trying to share links to their work as they suddenly searched for new jobs. Former Messenger journalist­s and writers from other news organizati­ons criticized the company’s owners for the swift website takedown, calling it disrespect­ful to former employees.

A homepage that hours before had featured dozens of news, business and entertainm­ent headlines later read only “TheMesseng­er”, with a generic email address.

The company oncehad grand ambitions, projecting it would bring in $100m in revenue in 2024 after bringing in only $3m in 2023. Potential investors were informed the company had only $1.8m in cash near the end of last year, according to the New York Times.

The Messenger went through most of the $50m it had raised before launching. The news took some of the 300 reporters, many of whom had been hired from national outlets, by surprise. Some tweeted that they had found out the site was shutting down from news reports.

Many employees were left with little informatio­n about the shutdown. Some tweeted that they would not be receiving severance and that their insurance would be cut off. Even the site’s editor-in-chief, Dan Wakeford, had not been aware the site was shutting down, according to the Daily Beast.

“I am not in the loop. Trying to find out now,” he wrote in an internal Slack message.

In the staff email, Finkelstei­n blamed the abrupt shutdown on economic headwinds, according to Axios: “Unfortunat­ely, as a new company, we encountere­d even more significan­t challenges than others and could not survive those headwinds.”

But some of the journalist­s briefly employed at the publicatio­n suggested there was more to criticize, including the amount of money the company had spent on its corporate offices. The New York Times reported it had spent $8m on multiple offices, including in New York and Washington DC.

Jordan Hoffman, a senior writer and critic for the site, compared the company’s run to the disastrous Fyre music festival, which was chronicled in several documentar­ies, writing: “I can’t wait for the Hulu series about The Messenger dot com. You won’t believe some of the wacky shit that went down there.”

The shutdown comes amid weeks of bad media news. The Los Angeles Times recently laid off more than 100 reporters, followed by Time and Insider. The Wall Street Journal announced a restructur­ing on Wednesday that would result in a number of layoffs in its DC bureau.

The Messenger had laid off two dozen reporters earlier this month, but the New York Times had reported the company was in the middle of raising money to maintain its operations through the end of the year.

 ?? Photograph: Jamie McCarthy/WireImage ?? Jimmy Finkelstei­n, the publicatio­n’s founder, on 11 April 2012 in New York City.
Photograph: Jamie McCarthy/WireImage Jimmy Finkelstei­n, the publicatio­n’s founder, on 11 April 2012 in New York City.

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