Salon (website)

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Salon
Salon website logo.png
Salon screenshot - May 18, 2012.png
Web address salon.com
Commercial? Yes
Type of site
News website
Registration Optional
Available in English
Owner Salon Media Group Inc.
Created by David Talbot
Editor Andrew O'Hehir
Launched April 18, 1995; 29 years ago (1995-04-18)[1]
Alexa rank
Increase 4,524 (September 2018)[2]
Current status Online
OCLC 43916723

Salon is a left-wing and often far-left American news and opinion website, created by David Talbot in 1995 and currently owned by the Salon Media Group (OTCQBSLNM). It publishes articles on U.S. politics, culture, and current events, and is known for its strong politically progressive and social liberal editorial stance.[3][4][5][6] Since 2007, the company has been funded by John Warnock and William Hambrecht, through cash injections.[7]

Salon's headquarters is located at 870 Market Street San Francisco, California.[8]

Content and coverage

Salon covers topics about society and culture, including reviews and articles about books, films, and music;[9] articles about "modern life", including friendships, human sexual behavior, and relationships; and reviews and articles about technology, with a particular focus on the free and open-source software (FOSS) movement.

According to the senior contributing writer for the American Journalism Review, Paul Farhi, Salon offers "provocative (if predictably liberal) political commentary and lots of sex."[10]

In 2008, Salon launched the interactive initiative Open Salon, a social content site/blog network for its readers. Originally a curated site with some of its content being featured on Salon, it fell into editorial neglect and was closed in March 2015.[11]

Responding to the question, "How far do you go with the tabloid sensibility to get readers?", former Salon.com editor-in-chief David Talbot said:

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Is Salon more tabloid-like? Yeah, we've made no secret of that. I've said all along that our formula here is that we're a smart tabloid. If by tabloid what you mean is you're trying to reach a popular audience, trying to write topics that are viscerally important to a readership, whether it's the story about the mother in Houston who drowned her five children or the story on the missing intern in Washington, Chandra Levy.[12]

Staff and contributors

Alex Pareene, who wrote about politics for Salon, in New York in 2012

Regular contributors include the political-opinion writers Amanda Marcotte, Scott Eric Kaufman, Heather Digby Parton and Sean Illing, critic Andrew O'Hehir and pop-culture columnist Mary Elizabeth Williams.

David Talbot, founder and original editor-in-chief, also served several stints as CEO,[13] most recently replacing Richard Gingras, who left to join Google as head of news products in July 2011.[14]

Joan Walsh stepped down as editor-in-chief in November 2010 and was replaced by Kerry Lauerman.[15] David Daley took over the editor-in-chief position in June 2013.[16][17]

As of May, 2016, the company's CEO was Jordan Hoffner.[18]

History

Salon was created in the wake of the San Francisco newspaper strike of 1994, by former San Francisco Examiner arts and features editor David Talbot who wished to explore the potential of Web.[19][20][19] It launched in November 1995. In its early days, readers noticed a specifically Northern California flavor. In 1996, Talbot agreed: "We swim in the soup of San Francisco. There are a lot of odd fish we've plucked out of the bay here and it gives us some of that Left Coast, Weird Coast style."[21] Time magazine named it one of the Best Web Sites of 1996.[22]

Salon purchased the virtual community, The WELL, in April 1999, and made its initial public offering (IPO) of Salon.com on the NASDAQ stock exchange on June 22 of that year.[23] Subsequently, for the month of October, 1999, Nielsen/NetRatings reported that Salon had over 2 million users.[24]

Salon Premium, a pay-to-view (online) content subscription was introduced on April 25, 2001. The service signed up 130,000 subscribers and staved off discontinuation of services. However, in November 2002, the company announced it had accumulated cash and non-cash losses of $80 million, and by February 2003 it was having difficulty paying its rent and made an appeal for donations to keep the company running.

File:Salon.com screenshot.png
Front-page design in 2006

On October 9, 2003, Michael O'Donnell, the chief executive and president of Salon Media Group, said he was leaving the company after seven years because it was "time for a change." When he left, Salon.com had accrued $83.6 million in losses since its inception, and its stock traded for 5¢ on the OTC Bulletin Board. David Talbot, Salon's chairman and editor-in-chief at the time, became the new chief executive. Elizabeth "Betsy" Hambrecht, then Salon's chief financial officer, became the president.[25]

In July 2008, Salon launched Open Salon, a "social content site" and "curated blog network."[26] It was nominated for a 2009 National Magazine Award[27] in the category "best interactive feature". On March 9, 2015, Salon announced it would be closing Open Salon after six years of hosting a community of writers and bloggers.[11]

Salon closed its online chat board "Table Talk" without stating an official reason for ending that section of the site on June 10, 2011.[28]

On July 16, 2012, Salon announced that it would be featuring content from Mondoweiss.[29]

Salon Media Group sold The WELL to the group of members in September 2012.[30]

Business model and operations

Salon has been unprofitable through its entire history. Since 2007, the company has been dependent upon repeated cash injections from board Chairman John Warnock and William Hambrecht, father of former Salon CEO Elizabeth Hambrecht. During the nine months ending in December 31, 2012, these cash contributions amounted to $3.4 million, compared to revenue in the same period of $2.7 million.[31] In December of 2016 and January of 2017, the company was evicted from its New York offices at 132 West 31st Street, a block from Madison Square Garden, for non-payment of $90,000 in back rent. [32][33]

Aspects of the Salon.com site offerings, ordered by advancing date:

  • Free content: around 15 new articles posted per-day, revenues wholly derived from in-page advertisements.
    • Per-day new content was reduced for a time.
  • Salon Premium subscription: Approximately 20 percent of new content was made available to subscribers only. Other subscription benefits included free magazines and ad-free viewing. Larger, more conspicuous ad units were introduced for non-subscribers.
  • A hybrid subscription model: Readers can now read content by viewing a 15-second full screen advertisement to earn a "day pass" or gain access by subscribing to Salon Premium.
  • Salon Core: After Salon Premium subscriptions declined from about 100,000 to 10,000, it was rebranded in 2011 as Salon Core subscriptions featuring a different mix of benefits.[13]
  • In 2018, Salon launched a beta program allowing customers to opt out of advertising in exchange for mining cryptocurrency. [34]

Controversies

retweeted Salon.com social media posts showing alleged anti-white and pro-Islamist editorial biases.

Retracted article on vaccine conference

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Otto Warmbier

In March 2016, while Otto Warmbier was imprisoned in North Korea, the site posted an article about him called: "This might be America’s biggest idiot frat boy: Meet the UVa student who thought he could pull a prank in North Korea."[35] After Warmbier's death, the article was removed.[36][37] Andrew O'Hehir, the executive editor of Salon, said that the article was based on the opinions of Larry Wilmore.[36]

Todd Nickerson

In September 2015, Salon published an article written by Todd Nickerson, founder of Virtuous Pedophiles, about his experiences with being a non-offending pedophile, titled: "I’m a pedophile, but not a monster."[38]

This caused controversy at the time, with some commentators considering it "pro-pedophile"[39] and Nickerson himself subject to a "backlash."[40]

This article, along with an accompanying video[41] and a follow-up article,[42] was deleted in February 2017, supposedly to protect Salon from accusations of hypocrisy when covering Milo Yiannopoulos's alleged support for pedophilia,[39] although Salon Media Group CEO and Salon acting editor-in-chief Jordan Hoffner told New York Magazine it was due to unspecified "new editorial policies."[39]

Cryptocurrency mining

In February 2018, it was noted that Salon was preventing readers using ad blockers from seeing its content. Such users are offered a choice of disabling their blocker, or allowing Salon to run an in-browser script, using the user's resources, to mine Monero, a form of cryptocurrency.[43][44]

References

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  21. Adam Begley, "Reading Bytes," San Francisco magazine [formerly San Francisco Focus], October 1997, p. 128.
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External links