arianna huffington posts
FeedPosted Feb 7th 2011 9:00AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)

Online media giant AOL (
AOL) has bought The Huffington Post for $315 million. It will pay $300 million in cash, the rest in stock for the news website.
When The Huffington Post raised money just over a year ago, the value of the site was rumored to be $125 million. It has 25 million unique users a month, according to Comscore figures. AOL has just over 90 million. The combined user bases could push the total ahead of MSN, the Microsoft (
MSFT) portal, and perhaps Yahoo! (
YHOO).
AOL, the parent company of
BloggingStocks, said
in a release that Arianna Huffington would lead the newly formed Huffington Post Media Group, which will integrate all the content from The Huffington Post and AOL sites, from politics and finance to Moviefone and Mapquest.
Continue reading AOL Buys Huffington Post: A New Era of Online News
Posted Jan 26th 2010 4:00PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Financial Crisis

Huffington Post Founder Arianna Huffington has championed
transferring your money to community banks from the large, money-center banks as a way to punish the big banks for their reprehensible conduct of paying absurdly large bonuses, even while being dependent on government assistance. I want to encourage all investors to follow Huffington's advise.
It may not be possible to move money to a small, local bank -- some regions of the U.S. may not have a small bank -- and they may not offer all of the 'bells and whistles' of a large bank, but where possible, taking this small step will support the health of these community banks, and will likely strengthen your local community. Chances are, your local, community bank is going to deploy that capital more productively than one of the big guns would.
Continue reading The Switch to Community Banks: A Trend That Must Continue
Posted Dec 7th 2009 1:00PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Employees, Politics, Recession
As most investors know, before President Obama took the oath of office, there were a half dozen problems waiting for him and his administration -- problems that no-doubt have discouraged many qualified, future aspirants from even thinking of running for the presidency during what will surely be a decade of repair and correction for the United States.
But if one had to isolate one problem President Obama must fix -- one on which his presidency will likely hinge -- it would be, of course, the U.S. economy, and within that, the issue of jobs.
Continue reading The unemployed are seeking answers: Obama, Democrats must deliver
Posted Jan 30th 2009 4:40PM by Bruce Watson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Rants and Raves, Financial Crisis

In
Gone with the Wind, Rhett Butler wryly notes that there is "just as much money to be made out of the wreckage of a civilization as from the upbuilding of one." Having observed the near-Roman excesses of New York's money men over the past couple of years, I might go even further and argue that the end of a civilization tends to be even more outrageously profligate than its beginning. After all, it's hard to imagine stern, conservative men like J.P. Morgan and Andrew Mellon giving in to the incredible excesses of the latest round of would-be magnates.
While tales like Stephen Schwarzman's million dollar
birthday and Dick Fuld's five
homes tend to capture the public's attention, these outrageous expenditures are only the tip of the iceberg. From $175
hamburgers at the Wall Street Burger Shoppe to John Thain's $1.22 million office
redecoration, it has become increasingly clear that New York's financial workers have spent the last few years living in a completely alien world. What's more, they are either unable or unwilling to adapt to the changing realities of America's economy.
Continue reading Wall Street, 2009: Deaf, blind, and just plain dumb
Posted Nov 6th 2008 11:11AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics
The business model of The Huffington Post, the largest and most famous political blogging and opinion site, fell apart completely yesterday. According to Hitwise, Huffington's traffic grew by 21% from October 28 to November 4. It has been rising sharply over the last year as interest in the election picked up speed.
With the election over, Huffington's traffic is certain to drop sharply and all of the reporters and editors it has hired since the beginning of the year may not have much to do.
Traditional wisdom is that old media will have to cut costs to stay alive, but there are some very successful Internet properties that may have to cut more since their natural audiences are leaving them. Political sites may turn to business and lifestyle reporting, but those categories are already crowded.
The Wall Street Journal writes "History, however, indicates that news outlets that benefit significantly from an election suffer about the same amount when it's over, so the Web sites will expand now at their peril."
Looking at Huffington, audience measurement service Compete shows the political website's traffic up 711% for the year ending in September. That number probably got even more impressive last month. In September, Huffington had 5.3 million visitors. In 2008, that figure was never above one million.
With all of the audience that Huffington is almost certain to lose it will also part with most of its advertising. And, with that, the large staff it will not be able to afford.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.
Posted Oct 2nd 2007 5:39PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Blogs, News Corp'B' (NWS), Politics
As newspapers nearly everywhere fret over the threat that bloggers pose to their very existence, one of the best and best-known blogs out there has decided she wants to have more in common with traditional media. The Huffington Post, which sports 43 full-time employees and another
1,800 bloggers, has decided that it wants to become an "all-inclusive digital newspaper,"
according to the Editors Weblog. Best-known as a left-leaning political blog, co-founder Arianna Huffington wants to make it more balanced, and has even suggested she would like have someone like Karl Rove join the staff.
The Huffington Post could give traditional news sites a run for their money because it links to contents from numerous other sites. It's status as a sort of news
'zine allows it to provide readers with a sort of "best of the web" news coverage -- a one stop-source for everything (some readers think) they need to read.
It remains to be seen whether The Huffington Post will be able to make the crossover into becoming a more "fair and balanced" media outlet. The founder, after all, has a
history of switching sides as it suits the prevailing political winds.
And we all love our media "fair and balanced," don't we? We all turn to Fox News (
News Corp. NYSE:
NWS) as a place to watch right-wing whack jobs spouting their demagoguery, but no one would ever take it seriously as a source of information. Right? Right?!
Posted Oct 2nd 2007 9:35AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Industry, Competitive Strategy, Marketing and Advertising, CBS Corp 'B' (CBS)
The head of CBS (NYSE: CBS) operation CBSNews.com is leaving to become CEO of popular blog Huffington Post. Blogging must have hit the big time.
Huffington is bringing Betsy Morgan on board to run one of the most visited blogs on the internet. Calling itself an online newspaper, the collection of breaking stories and opinion has raised money from Softbank and Greycroft Partners. The company may have brought in as much as $10 million from VCs.
Huffington claims to have 3.5 million unique visitors a month, according to The New York Times. The company has more than 40 employees.
While the news is not earth-shattering by itself, it does highlight a trend as management and editorial talent moves from mainstream media to companies like Huffington, TechCrunch, and GigaOm. Most of these blogs were started by one or two people, but are now companies that reportedly bring in seven figures in revenue each year.
The rise of the blog may also be something of an unpleasant reminder to the newspaper industry that it has not done well with its online businesses and that much smaller news and comment sites have risen from nowhere to take over much of the market. Once again entrepreneurs triumph over big business.
Douglas A. McIntyre is a partner at 24/7 Wall St.
Posted Jun 14th 2006 9:35AM by Tobias Buckell (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and Services, Launches, Industry, Competitive Strategy, Yahoo! (YHOO)
Not too long I posted a story about how Yahoo! Answers was
becoming a dominant part of Yahoo!'s traffic, and one of the most visited information and reference type sites online. Techcrunch notes that Yahoo! Answers is launching something called an 'Ask the Planet' campaign. The idea is that celebrities, notables, and other high-profile type people (like Arianna Huffington, Suze Orman, Stephen Hawking, Bono, etc) will provide the answers in order to win prizes.
The prizes are pretty nifty, like free gas for a year for answering correctly to a question posed by the Click and Clack brothers from NPR. Yahoo! is clearly trying to drive the visibility of an already popular service even higher by using celebrity mojo. The question is, how and when will Yahoo! choose to slip in advertising or seek to monetize this interesting resource, and what effect will that have on their traffic and bottom line?