<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, shine]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, shine]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/shine http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/shine <![CDATA[Did Elisabeth Murdoch Just Get Conned?]]> It seems Joanna Shields has found another mark. Barely 18 months ago, she sold her also-ran social network Bebo to AOL for $850 million. The disastrous deal still haunts AOL. Now she's charmed Rupert Murdoch's daughter into bankrolling her. How?

By selling her a vision of online media moguldom, in which Elisabeth Murdoch (pictured) would conquer the one medium that still thwarts her father's ambitions, the internet. Under the arrangement, Elisabeth's media company Shine will invest in Shields' content startup, Kara Swisher of All Things D reports, helping launch a new player in the hot online video space. Murdoch, to her credit, conceived the idea to import The Office and Pop Idol to America. But she's also a sucker for charmers: Her "close friend" and sometime yacht guest Ben Silverman unloaded his production company, Reveille, onto Shine for a cool $125 million. The Australia-born mogul-in-the-making should hope her new partner does not similarly boomerang.

That deal seemed smart when Silverman was an NBC honcho in a position to steer business Elisabeth Murdoch's way, but now he's been ousted — and is all set to compete with Murdoch with the online video startup he's building for Barry Diller's IAC.

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<![CDATA[Yahoo GM will never park in Yahoo's pregnancy parking spots again]]> We never quite figured out why the world needed Shine, the women's site from Yahoo. And now Yahoo has figured out it doesn't need Amy Iorio, the site's general manager. Iorio got reorged off the site at the end of June. Shortly thereafter, PaidContent reports, Iorio got reorged out of the company altogether. Her fellow Yahoos will not miss her.

Besides Shine, Iorio is perhaps best known for parking in spots reserved for pregnant women and for trying (but failing) to convince Yahoo to hire her brother — after the company had already hired her sister and paid her husband and friends for consulting work.

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<![CDATA[Yahoo opens site for women, finally gets a place to show those teeth-whitening ads]]> ShineAd.jpgAmy Iorio, the nonpregnant Yahoo exec who likes to park in spots reserved for expectant mothers, has found a way for Yahoo advertisers in consumer packaged goods, retail and pharmaceuticals to reach their target audience of women aged 25 to 54. (They are the key decisionmakers in all our lives, according to the ad salesman's stock patter.) Iorio says Shine (screenshot below) is for those women who felt left out by what other Internet destinations, such as Glam.com and iVillage, offer. Iorio told the WSJ: "These women were looking for one place that gave them everything." Everything but a parking spot.

YahooShine.jpg

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