<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, ziff davis]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, ziff davis]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/ziffdavis http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/ziffdavis <![CDATA[PC Magazine kills print edition]]> Why, God, why? PC Magazine was such a nice, safe publication. It never hurt anyone. It sort of kept to itself around the neighborhood, but it seemed perfectly normal. Not at all like those rowdies at Infoworld. Ziff-Davis, the publisher, has already gone through bankruptcy. Wasn't that enough ? In a word: No. Seventy percent of PC Mag's revenue now comes from the Internet, according to Ziff's CEO. Valleywag alum Nicholas Carlson has a tidy little reblog of the whole situation.

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<![CDATA[Ziff-Davis CTO leaves meaningless job for NBC]]> The latest we're-supposed-to-care chatter from the tipline: "It was just announced yesterday that Ziff-Davis Chief Technology Officer Robyn Peterson is leaving to go to NBC. Ouch!" Ouch? The real ouch is that Ziff-Davis Media, the considerably reduced tech-magazine publisher, was paying someone to be its CTO in the first place.

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<![CDATA[Ziff-Davis kills DigitalLife snoozefest]]> "The poor economic conditions have created a very different and difficult dynamic for us this year," says an email explaining the cancellation of next week's DigitalLife Expo in New York. But don't you quit your startup in a panic. Our gadgethound buddies at Gizmodo don't buy the economy excuse. "We think it's lack of serious news draw," writes Wilson Rothman. "Booth after booth after booth of stuff we already covered" at earlier, bigger shows. All I remember from last year was iRobot's gutter-cleaning droid.

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<![CDATA[Print magazines about tech prove a bankrupt idea]]> Jason Young, CEO of technology publisher Ziff-Davis, couldn't solve the company's $225 million debt problem. That means a round-trip back to bankruptcy court, whiled it restructures yet again. What it has left to restructure is an utter mystery.

It's already sold off the database, market research, and enterprise group. All it's got left is PC Magazine, its game group (which recently restructured itself, merging print and online, to the mass confusion of all), ExtremeTech, and the DigitalLife conference. Young insists the company's making great progress. Why doesn't he just file for Chapter 7, the liquidation kind of bankruptcy? That seems easier.

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<![CDATA[Parents have no clue what their kids are playing]]> What They Play"About three in four parents of young gamers never or hardly ever touch the stuff," reports an Associated Press poll. That might explain why so many tweens wind up with Grand Theft Auto in their Christmas stockings. What They Like, a startup, aims to guide out-of-touch parents through today's media landscape. Helmed by the Ziff Davis-fleeing executives Ira Becker and John Davison, the company's first project, What They Play, is a resource for clueless parental units. You know, so they don't wind up buying the ultraviolent Manhunt 2 for their toddlers.

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<![CDATA[Ira Becker, a former executive at troubled...]]> Ira Becker, a former executive at troubled tech-trade publisher Ziff Davis, has raised half of a planned $3 million in financing for his videogame-focused "online review and advertising" website, called What They Like. John Davison, a former editor at Ziff, is also involved in the startup. [PaidContent]

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<![CDATA[Ziff-Davis stanches cash hemorrhage, bleeds people for a change]]> Ira BeckerJohn Davison More bad news for Ziff-Davis, the storied, and troubled, tech publisher: Two executives in its videogames group have left the company. General manager Ira Becker and editorial director John Davison announced they're departing to start a new venture, thought to be a family-oriented videogame site. Opportune timing considering Ziff's uncertain future. It's also sure to dampen any enthusiasm among potential buyers for the technology publisher's shrinking game portfolio, which have been on the block since late last year. Becker and Davison, you see, were responsible for the website 1UP.com, the only segment of the group that has shown consistent growth. Ziff-Davis has been trying to sell off its magazines (Electronic Gaming Monthly and Games for Windows) as well as 1UP.

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<![CDATA[Technology publisher Ziff-Davis continues...]]> Technology publisher Ziff-Davis continues to struggle financially. Second-quarter earnings fell 29 percent to $16.5 million compared to the previous year. [PaidContent]

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<![CDATA[Ziff-Davis doesn't pay its debt]]> Jason YoungDespite the recent sale of its enterprise group — a set of tech trade magazines including eWeek — vultures are circling technology publisher Ziff-Davis. Today it announced it was forced to forgo an interest payment on its $390 million debt. The skipped payment is permitted under its debt covenants, says CEO Jason Young, who expects Ziff will "be able to restructure our debt outside of the courts." Young, of course, would like you to think that the aging print publisher is remaking itself into a digital-media growth machine. But how many startups do you know have $390 million in debt — largely because of bets on print vehicles that have yet to pay off?


The hemorrhaging is in part due to Ziff-Davis's heavy investment in videogame magazines. Three folded in the past two years — Xbox Nation, GMR, and The Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine — as readers moved online. So far it has been unable to sell off website 1UP.com and its two remaining videogame magazines.

Ziff-Davis has sought the aid of bankruptcy advisers Alvarez & Marsal, who a Folio source described as a last-ditch effort: "This is the first step in the public, ugly dismantling of one of the most storied companies in our business."

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<![CDATA[Revision3 COO David Prager, asked to confirm...]]> Revision3 COO David Prager, asked to confirm that Patrick Norton is leaving the Ziff-Davis-owned DL.TV to join his online-video company, answers with a silence that speaks volumes. [Twit.tv]

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<![CDATA[Revision3's new face keeps it all in the family]]> Patrick Norton returns to Jim Louderback's welcoming armsMore than one tipster tells us that Patrick Norton is leaving Ziff-Davis's DL.TV, and, after a brief paternity leave, joining Revision3. DL.TV, of course, was the brainchild of Jumpin' Jim Louderback, the former PC Magazine editor who's now Revision3's CEO. And before Ziff-Davis, Louderback and Norton worked together at TechTV, where Norton was the host of the popular "Screen Savers" show — the same show that later birthed Revision3 cofounder Kevin Rose's career. It's not a surprising hire, but it should answer any remaining questions about how crushingly insular the world of online video is.

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<![CDATA[Jason Young replaces Robert Callahan as CEO...]]> Business Wire]]]> http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=285472&view=rss&microfeed=true <![CDATA[Open blinds: Player at the game conference]]> Valleywag conference correspondent ConFonz drops an item too juicy to run with names — for now. Which Game Marketing Conference attendee isn't playing fair?

"Cheat maniac," formerly of Ziff Davis, now of IGN, is a notorious shtupper. Yes, he's married, and yes, he still diddled at least three separate salesladies at the Ziff Games Group. And yes, he was married at the time.

Send your guesses to tips@valleywag.com, or drop 'em in the comments.

Earlier: ConFonz at the Game Marketing Conference: gamers vs. little old ladies [Valleywag]

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<![CDATA[ConFonz at the Game Marketing Conference: gamers vs. little old ladies]]> game-init.jpgValleywag's conference-going correspondent — or ConFonz, the name he's adopted for protection and lucrative merchandising ops — sends a multi-part report from the SF-hosted Game Marketing Conference. Why does ConFonz always get pushed out by dermatologists or dowagers?

Remember, these are the same people that told you John Romero is going to make you his bitch.

The Game Marketing Conference took place behind Sega's San Francisco offices on Wednesday and Thursday. It's strange being here because a double digit percentage of the folks here have fired me (There's yer only clue!)

One highlight, however, was watching the faces on the various media sales people's faces when Doug Scott, EA's director of entertainment marketing, said that he felt 50% of EA"s marketing budget should be spent on non-traditional (read non-print/non-banner) marketing. The room chuckled a bit, then shifted uncomfortably, as the Ziff Davis and IGN people collectively shit themselves.

The highlights of the event were twofold: first, as soon as the 600 Townsend-hosted event was over at 5 PM, the little old lady's auxiliary showed up to host an art opening for the Norwegian design exhibit in the lobby. They carted in cases of 2-buck-chuck and hassled the conference attendees, demanding that they remove themselves from the premises immediately. Sean, VP of Kohnke Communications, was threatening to beat the living shit out of the old bags, but relented when it came time to head across the street to the Khonke-hosted I-Play party at the Mars Bar.

In Part II, ConFonz drops the party gossip.

Game Marketing Conference [The Game Initiative]

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