#Slate

The real reason why Jeff Bezos killed the Washington Post. – Slate

The Media

Jeff Bezos Killed the Washington Post

The billionaire wanted the Post to die, because a vigorous, well-resourced newspaper does not help his bottom line.

By Alex Kirshner, Feb 05, 202611:07 AM

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Arnold Jerocki / FilmMagic and Andrew Harnik /Getty Images.

Copy Link Share Comment

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily.

Jeff Bezos killed the Washington Post on Wednesday. The paper survives as a husk, but the institution that became one of the cathedrals of world journalism is gone. The biggest mistake one could make in analyzing this corporate slaughter is to lay the blame solely on the state of journalism. That’d be wrong.

Times are hard in journalism, just like they always are. The big new problem is A.I. swallowing up search traffic, which itself had already sucked up the ad revenue that used to go to newspapers and magazines. Otherwise, all of the things that have been hard for the past 20 years are still hard now. Powerful corporate interests have captured great newsrooms, or run their own old family businesses into the ground. Fox News, social media, and podcasts—in that chronological order—have cocooned a lot of people to want only “news” that isn’t really news. Megyn Kelly is now a red-meat podcaster instead of an occasionally punchy Fox host.

The Post laid off 300 journalists on Wednesday. This included more or less the entire remaining staff of the paper’s legendary sports section, which produced several of the best writers to ever do the job. The days of the superstar columnist with the biggest megaphone in town were long gone, but the section remained tremendous. The paper slashed its international coverage, laying off a journalist who found out as she reported from Kyiv. Many editors across desks lost their jobs. Worst of all, not that it’s a contest, but the Washington Post will now be a lot less Washingtonian. The paper has fired at least a substantial chunk of its metro reporters, who serviced a city and region that have been under a multifront attack from the Trump administration.

In a stiff email, Post executive editor Matt Murray tried to make this move sound like yet another example of a tough business forcing tough decisions. “The ecosystem of news and information, on- and off-platform, is changing radically,” Murray wrote to his staffers, fired and not. He lamented the “serious decline” of search traffic. He wrote of increased competition from other people, other platforms.

AI image…

He did not write about one specific person: Bezos, who bought the paper from the Graham family in 2013 for $250 million. (Note: Slate is owned by Graham Holdings, the company controlled by the Graham family.)

That is because Murray values his paycheck and didn’t want to point out the Post’s real cause of death—namely, that one of the richest people in human history staged a controlled burn to turn it into ash. Bezos wanted the Post to die, because a vigorous, well-resourced Washington Post does not suit his vision for the world or his own bottom line. The end of the Post is a matter not of journalistic economics but of Bezos’ incentives.

Whatever the Post is worth today is immaterial to Bezos’ wealth. It’s barely even what you’d call a rounding error. Bezos could sustain the Post’s operating losses for hundreds of lifetimes without even threatening his current wealth, let alone the additional wealth he and his heirs will amass passively in years to come from his stakes in Amazon, Blue Origin, and who knows what else.

A man worth more than $240 billion does not care even a little bit, in pure dollar terms, about a $100 million annual loss running a prestige business. When Bezos bought the paper, he made clear to the Post’s prior management that he viewed the paper not purely through a profit lens, the New York Times reported. Bezos wrote to Post employees, “The paper’s duty will remain to its readers and not to the private interests of its owners.” That turned out to be, at best, incredibly misleading.

The Post itself doesn’t affect Bezos’ vast fortune much, but what it represents does. One of the employees he laid off on Wednesday was the paper’s Amazon reporter, Caroline O’Donovan. More critically, even under Bezos’ ownership, the Post frequently published stories that upset the Trump administration, whose vindictive approach to regulation could pose obvious problems for Amazon and Bezos’ space company, Blue Origin.

Related From Slate

Mary ZieglerHow Trump Used a Law Meant to Protect Abortion Seekers to Arrest Members of the Press Read More

Bezos understood this risk more than a year ago, when he drove away 250,000 paying subscribers by stepping in to prevent the paper from endorsing Kamala Harris. Bezos then transformed the Post’s opinion section, away from a broad-based page and into a propaganda arm devoted to promoting “personal liberties and free markets.”

The paper’s executives and owner punted away from aggressively covering Trump’s second term, bleeding both subscribers and a general share of viral stories that instead went to competitors like the Times and Wall Street Journal. There was money to be made by investing in the paper’s reporting staff, who never stopped doing their best to provide honest (and necessarily adversarial) coverage of Trump. Bezos just didn’t want that money.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The real reason why Jeff Bezos killed the Washington Post.

Tags: AI, Competitors, Jeff Bezos, Journalism, Katherine Graham, Killed, Matt Murray, Newspapers Changing, Real Reason, Slate, Social Media
#AI #Competitors #JeffBezos #Journalism #KatherineGraham #Killed #MattMurray #NewspapersChanging #RealReason #Slate #SocialMedia
bezos-at-amazon-decides-only-some-issues-at-washington-post
2026-02-07

Bienvenue sur Moltbook, le réseau social pour IA qui fait paniquer la Silicon Valley
🗞️ Slate.fr - 🕐 06/02 20:55
Avez-vous remarqué quelque chose d'étrange sur vos réseaux sociaux ces derniers temps? Plus étrange encore qu'un nouveau débat «hot take» ou qu'une vidéo de chat? Peut-être avez-vous vu des captures d'écran montrant des discussions d'intelligences ar... [2750 chars]
🔗 slate.fr/tech-internet/bienven
#actu #news #presse #slate.fr

Image d'illustration de l'article
2026-02-06

Think You’re Smarter Than Slate’s CEO? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz. – Slate

Think You’re Smarter Than Slate’s CEO? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.  SlateNetanyahu: Ties to former PM Barak…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #quizzes #slate-games #the-slate-quiz #UnitedStates #Us #USA
newsbeep.com/387252/

2026-02-04

Red wine drinkers were brainwashed by an unexpected source. The real story is wild.

This is part of Wet February, a series about America’s increasingly muddled relationship with drinking—and how to sip your way through it…
#wine #AmericanWine #America #Americanwine #california #history #movies #slate-plus #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesWine #USWine #USAWine #wet-february #Wine
diningandcooking.com/2498680/r

Dining and Cookingdc@vive.im
2026-02-04

Red wine drinkers were brainwashed by an unexpected source. The real story is wild.

This is part of Wet February, a series about America’s increasingly muddled relationship with drinking—and how to …
#dining #cooking #diet #food #AmericanWine #America #Americanwine #california #history #movies #slate-plus #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesWine #USWine #USAWine #wet-february #Wine
diningandcooking.com/2498680/r

Notícias Automotivasautomotivas
2026-02-03

Faça você mesmo: Slate quer inovar ao propor que os próprios donos consertem seus carros e mantenham a garantia noticiasautomotivas.com.br/fac

Notícias Automotivasautomotivas
2026-02-03

Slate promete picape elétrica barata, mas preço já sobe antes do lançamento, para além dos R$ 130 mil prometidos noticiasautomotivas.com.br/sla

2026-01-29

Back to watching some #ShoutyBlokesWithGuitars tonight in #Newport / #Casnewydd as part of the Horizons Cymru mini-festival.

First up local faves #TheRogues, and later my personal highlight #Slate. Good to catch #Chroma and #Himalayas too.

#gigs #LiveMusic #CerddoriaethFyw

The Rogues.Slate.
2026-01-29

Trump shifts rhetoric after Alex Pretti’s killing.

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to…
#NewsBeep #News #Topstories #DonaldTrump #Headlines #ICE #ice-in-minneapolis #Immigration #Minnesota #PoliceViolence #project-2025 #slate-plus #StephenMiller #TopStories
newsbeep.com/376710/

MyPost.tomypost2
2026-01-26

get.mypost.to/n3TpZR
From doing daily affirmations to lengthy gentle wakeups, who has time for all...

2026-01-22
Day 22
#365project

This adorable mini post box added a nice pop of colour to the rainy and grey day.

Peep the seagull (aka shithawk) on the chimney. He's eyeballing me because he knows I'll feed the crows at some point.

.
.
.
.
.
#Wales #Cymru #NorthWales #Porthmadog #PostBox #RedPostBox #RoyalMail #Slate #SlateCottage #SlateHouse #SlateCladding #WelshArchitecture
#HistoricBuilding #Architecture
2026-01-22

Vous voulez vivre plus longtemps? Lisez des livres
🗞️ Slate.fr - 🕐 21/01 20:55
Passer plus de temps à bouquiner figure parmi les résolutions de début d'année préférées des Français. En janvier, on voit fleurir un nouveau livre sur la table de chevet, on dépoussière sa vieille carte de bibliothèque et, en début de soirée, on cou... [3378 chars]
🔗 slate.fr/sante/vivre-longtemps
#actu #news #presse #slate.fr

Image d'illustration de l'article

Trump had a plan after the Minneapolis ICE shooting. I saw something far different there. – Slate

Mysteriously Bold-Mouthed Politics

Minneapolis Rises

Trump had a playbook after Renee Good’s ICE shooting. I saw up close what’s happening instead.

By Aymann Ismail

Jan 16, 20265:40 AM

Aymann Ismail

Copy Link Share Comment

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily.

I am in the passenger seat of a stranger’s car in Minneapolis, four days after Renee Nicole Good was killed here. I’m riding with someone who was doing the same kind of work we think Good was doing when an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot her. Right now, our work is much quieter.

We’re driving in loose loops when a volunteer who is patrolling the streets as a pedestrian observer on the Signal call we’re listening to—a broad network of thousands of locals relaying up-to-the-moment intel on ICE activity—reports two vehicles near Karmel Mall, known locally as “Somali Mall.” Another volunteer fulfilling the role of dispatcher, also on the call, identifies them by make and model. Another observer cross-references the license plates against a running database. They’re confirmed as ICE vehicles, unmarked like they almost always are.

My guide for the day, who I’ll call C, sits up. “They’re going to come past us right here,” they say, accelerating toward the intersection.

Within seconds we spot them: two SUVs moving faster than the flow of traffic. Through their windows, I can see silhouettes of men with heavy Kevlar high on the neck, faces covered, sunglasses.

C begins calling out every turn, street, and direction the SUVs take—while laying on their car horn hard and continuously, like an alarm. The sound is constant and blunt. It could easily be mistaken for an expression of anger, but watching how others in the area—pedestrians, other drivers—react, it’s a signal: a warning to anyone within earshot that ICE is moving through the neighborhood. It turns what ICE hoped would be a discreet operation into a public event. One pedestrian we pass hears the horn, turns, and gives the ICE vehicles the finger.

The SUVs accelerate. We follow closely, C still honking, still relaying their movements. Then they turn onto a familiar street.

“This is my street,” C says. Their posture changes. They look at me. “Can you record this?”

At the next stop sign, the vehicles split. One SUV pauses, blocking our path, allowing the other to pull away, surging into the intersection, cutting ahead of an uninvolved civilian car, using it as a moving barrier. If C had chased through, we would have been hit broadside: “They have absolutely no respect for traffic laws.” That first SUV is gone.

“They sometimes travel in pairs,” C tells me. “You can’t follow both. They’ll break and try to shake anyone observing.”

The remaining ICE vehicle, a Wagoneer, continues through the block. C keeps honking, keeps calling turns. We circle again. “They’re letting me pass my house again,” they report into Signal.

Then: “They’re stopped in front of my house.”

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Trump had a plan after the Minneapolis ICE shooting. I saw something far different there.

#ContinueTheirWorkToStopICE #ICE #ICEShooting #Minneapolis #MinneapolisShooting #Plan #Signal #Slate #SomethingDifferent #TrackingICE #Trump #Volunteers
2026-01-17
Strates dans une ancienne ardoisière.

#slate #underground #souterrain #quarry #untertage #hiking #sotterranei
2026-01-17

Why the president hasn’t sent the military into Minneapolis.

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #DonaldTrump #ICE #Immigration #judiciary #Minnesota #slate-plus #SupremeCourt #UnitedStates #Us #USA
newsbeep.com/362694/

2026-01-16

Et si Donald Trump était la meilleure chose qui soit arrivée à l'Europe?
🗞️ Slate.fr - 🕐 16/01 07:59
«Nous ne voulons pas devenir Américains.» La réponse des cinq partis représentés au Parlement du Groenland, début janvier, face à la reprise par Donald Trump de ses prétentions territoriales sur l'île arctique, a eu le mérite d'être franche. Mais l'é... [4986 chars]
🔗 slate.fr/monde/donald-trump-eu
#actu #news #presse #slate.fr

Image d'illustration de l'article

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.07
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst