Thread: Kotaku editor-in-chief resigns, staff to focus on creating guides

Vyse

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Article:
Jen Glennon, who took over as editor in chief of Kotaku in October, resigned Thursday. In a resignation letter seen by Aftermath, Glennon says that she made this choice due to the management team's recent decision to deprioritize news in favor of guides.

Glennon is the second editor in chief of Kotaku since Stephen Totilo's departure in 2021, following Patricia Hernandez, who was fired in August 2023. (Aftermath co-founder Riley MacLeod functioned as interim editor in chief prior to Hernandez's hiring.)

"After careful consideration, I have concluded that the current management structure and decision-making processes at G/O Media are not aligned with my values and goals for Kotaku," Glennon wrote in her letter of resignation, which was addressed to G/O Media executives Jim Spanfeller and Lea Goldman.

"I firmly believe that the decision to 'invert' Kotaku's editorial strategy to deprioritize news in favor of guides is fundamentally misguided given the current infrastructure of the site," Glennon wrote. "[This decision is] directly contradicted by months of traffic data, and shows an astonishing disregard for the livelihoods of the remaining writers and editors who work here."

Glennon also announced her resignation on Twitter, writing, "I've resigned from Kotaku and Jim Spanfeller is an herb."

According to a source close to the situation, Kotaku's staff will be expected to create 50 guides a week at the site. Currently, Kotaku's homepage features a prominent "game tips and guides" module at the top of the page, in a space that was previously reserved for major stories and breaking news. Staff members have criticized the homepage redesign on social media, noting that Kotaku's major source of traffic is not guides.

Aftermath reached out to G/O Media for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

Since Great Hill Partners' acquisition of the sites, then known as Gizmodo Media, in 2019, the overall portfolio has seen a decline in traffic as well as an exodus of editorial leadership and staff—the co-founders of Aftermath included. Most recently, Spanfeller announced the sale of Deadspin and the layoff of all staff working there. In November, Paste bought former G/O Media site Jezebel, following the site's closure and a full layoff of its staff. In March 2023, former G/O site Lifehacker was sold to Ziff Davis.
 
Kotaku is a cesspool and I'm glad to see it's finally being managed correctly, by telling the loons to keep their mouths shut.

It was a blessing for them to fire Patricia and now this is a whole damn parade. Couldn't have happened to a better website.

I'm praying Polygon is next
 
Never read much from them so can't say i will miss them. Gaming media needs to step up the plate if they want to be relevant in 2024
 
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Well gamefaqs already has guides, so I don't know why people would go to Kohaku. If they or any other gaming website want to flourish, they should try and stick by either an apolitical stance or a more balanced political stance. Woke journalism is not only annoying, it is very predictable. So any organisation trying to follow the woke/DEI path is just going to be cutting into the margins of other organisations attempting to do the same monotonous/brainless thing.
 
I don't follow Kotaku at all because, frankly, they're fucking trash, but what this appears to be to me is we have a chick who really doesn't like to play games being told by her shitty employers that she now not only has to, but has to write guides for them. And that has amused me greatly indeed.
 
Article:
Jen Glennon, who took over as editor in chief of Kotaku in October, resigned Thursday. In a resignation letter seen by Aftermath, Glennon says that she made this choice due to the management team's recent decision to deprioritize news in favor of guides.

Glennon is the second editor in chief of Kotaku since Stephen Totilo's departure in 2021, following Patricia Hernandez, who was fired in August 2023. (Aftermath co-founder Riley MacLeod functioned as interim editor in chief prior to Hernandez's hiring.)

"After careful consideration, I have concluded that the current management structure and decision-making processes at G/O Media are not aligned with my values and goals for Kotaku," Glennon wrote in her letter of resignation, which was addressed to G/O Media executives Jim Spanfeller and Lea Goldman.

"I firmly believe that the decision to 'invert' Kotaku's editorial strategy to deprioritize news in favor of guides is fundamentally misguided given the current infrastructure of the site," Glennon wrote. "[This decision is] directly contradicted by months of traffic data, and shows an astonishing disregard for the livelihoods of the remaining writers and editors who work here."

Glennon also announced her resignation on Twitter, writing, "I've resigned from Kotaku and Jim Spanfeller is an herb."

According to a source close to the situation, Kotaku's staff will be expected to create 50 guides a week at the site. Currently, Kotaku's homepage features a prominent "game tips and guides" module at the top of the page, in a space that was previously reserved for major stories and breaking news. Staff members have criticized the homepage redesign on social media, noting that Kotaku's major source of traffic is not guides.

Aftermath reached out to G/O Media for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

Since Great Hill Partners' acquisition of the sites, then known as Gizmodo Media, in 2019, the overall portfolio has seen a decline in traffic as well as an exodus of editorial leadership and staff—the co-founders of Aftermath included. Most recently, Spanfeller announced the sale of Deadspin and the layoff of all staff working there. In November, Paste bought former G/O Media site Jezebel, following the site's closure and a full layoff of its staff. In March 2023, former G/O site Lifehacker was sold to Ziff Davis.
iu
 
Oh no how we will the world survive without Kotaku to report on the lack of gay trans albino disabled represntation in gaming.
I hope congress adds 1.2 trillion in spending in their next bill to.save Kotaku. Who else will report on how toxic and masculine the gaming community is.
 
Oh no how we will the world survive without Kotaku to report on the lack of gay trans albino disabled represntation in gaming.
I hope congress adds 1.2 trillion in spending in their next bill to.save Kotaku. Who else will report on how toxic and masculine the gaming community is.
I remember when gaming mags like EGM and PSM were staffed by actual gamers who occasionally engaged in fanboy humor to keep us entertained while reading through their articles which ranged from the dumb to very informative.

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And on occasion they'd give us some T&A.

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I remember when gaming mags like EGM and PSM were staffed by actual gamers who occasionally engaged in fanboy humor to keep us entertained while reading through their articles which ranged from the dumb to very informative.

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91jjgDTVLqL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg


And on occasion they'd give us some T&A.

cassiepsm.jpg
"For decades gaming magazines were keepers of gaming, heralds of a brighter future for all gamers until the dark times, until the DEI."
 
It brings me joy to hear that this outfit that has been leeching off of interest in video games to propagate its filthy ideology has not been profitable and is being cut off by its parent company and will have to stoop to writing game guides. Welcome to hospice care, Kotaku. May it be rough yet swift.
 
I personally loved Kotaku for a long time granted sometimes they veered into the completely stupid. Kotaku died when Stephen Totilo left.
 
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It seems the pendulum is swinging in full force lately.

Sadly the damage is largely done as a lot of firms had to implement their BS and so it is institutional for many now. However financially and politically it's proven to be more of a bane versus a benefit and BlackRock are about making money, and they've been turning their attention more to AI and latterly Cryptocurrency, which they are buying into a lot.