‘News is being carried by entertainment’: Nick Denton on the state of media

In a nearly full Alice Tully Hall on Tuesday, Nick Denton, the man who oversaw the rise and fall of Gawker held forth on what went wrong and why digital news publications are in a tough predicament.

Denton held forth in a conversation with Fusion senior editor Felix Salmon at the closing panel at Transition, a two-day event put on by marketing platform Percolate.

Below are some choice excerpts from the conversation. In a few instances, these have been lightly edited.

On what went wrong for Gawker at the Hulk Hogan trial
“The jury liked him, and didn’t like a bunch of Fifth Avenue deviants. It was a popularity contest, and we lost, conclusively.”

On innovation in media
“There’s been a lot of innovation in the distribution of content, in making sure the right person sees the right content at the right time. If you look at the content creation level, there really hasn’t been that much innovation at all.”

On the rise of autoplay video
“We have yet to see if it actually makes money for anybody. And we’ve yet to see if the user experience is significantly improved over simply scrolling text.”

On the value independent digital media companies place in news
“The news is being carried by the entertainment. As long as things are good, the news will be fine. [But] news will be one of the first places to feel the cuts.”

On how the internet is perceived
“I love Twitter. You have very important conversations, it’s forced social change, political change. I’m not a Twitter basher, but the trolls on Twitter have given the rest of the internet a bad name. The writing is more defensive. People are expecting that toxic reaction. What would have been seen as standard journalistic criticism can now quite easily be dubbed bullying. The attitudes have changed.”

On Denton’s future
“A lot of lawsuits. I’ve been trying to find a better phrase than professional litigant to describe my upcoming year.”

On the Internet being terrible
“How much worse could it get?”

More in Media

The Rundown: Google has drawn its AI payment lines — and publishers’ leverage is narrow

For publishers trying to navigate AI licensing, the message was blunt: Google is willing to pay for access, but not for training – and it remains unwilling to define AI Overviews as a compensable use of journalism.

search referral traffic for publishers

Media Briefing: Google’s latest core update a reminder that pageviews can’t remain the primary metric

Google’s latest core update signals pageviews can no longer be the primary metric, favoring intent-solving publishers over scale.

After an oversaturation of AI-generated content, creators’ authenticity and ‘messiness’ are in high demand

Content creators and brand marketing specialists on how 2026 will be the year creator authenticity becomes even more crucial in the face of rampant AI-generated “slop” flooding social media platforms.