IAC/InterActiveCorp chairman Barry Diller is considering selling the Daily Beast following the departure of Tina Brown, who helped start the news website in 2008, a person with knowledge of the matter said.
Brown, who served as the Daily Beast’s
editor-in-chief, had explored the idea of a sale with Diller before
announcing her departure on Thursday, said the person, who asked not to
be named because the deliberations are private. The company hasn’t made
any formal moves to shop around the business, the person said.
The editor is now leaving the site to start a new venture, Tina Brown Live Media, which will build on her ‘Women in the World’ conferences. Her exit leaves the Daily Beast without its best-known voice and follows a failed effort to integrate the site with Newsweek magazine. IAC agreed to sell Newsweek to IBT Media last month for an undisclosed sum, raising speculation that the company would offload the Daily Beast as well.
“We’re always looking at the best options for all of our businesses,” said Justine Sacco, a spokeswoman for New York-based IAC.
Shares of IAC, an Internet
holding company that includes Ask.com and Match.com, rose 0.8% to
$53.16 at the close in New York. The stock has climbed 13% this year.
Brown, a former editor of the New Yorker and Vanity Fair, started the Daily Beast with Diller five years ago, aiming to create a source of breaking news and commentary for the Internet era. IAC then purchased Newsweek as part of an agreement with the late Sidney Harman in November 2010 and combined it with the Daily Beast. The company forged the deal to sell it to IBT Media after struggling to make the magazine profitable.
‘Enormously proud’
“Creating the Daily Beast at the original
instigation of Barry Diller in 2008 has given me some of the most
exciting and fulfilling years of my professional life,” Brown said in
the statement. “I am enormously proud of what our brilliant editorial
team has achieved at the Beast. And I am proud, too, of what we did with Newsweek in the battle we waged to save it from the overwhelming forces of media change.”
After announcing plans to sell Newsweek earlier
this year, Diller said that publishing a weekly magazine at a time when
news has become instantaneous was a fool’s errand.
AMIT KUMAR SINGH
PGDM - 3RD
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