Posted on 02/27/2018 4:34:11 PM PST by Kaslin
When we checked in with Newsweek last week, the magazine had just published a news article critical of the magazine’s owners. That article only saw the light of day after a number of reporters and editors threatened to quit if it were spiked. It came after two top editors were fired and a raid based on an investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney. Today, the Daily Beast reports the struggling magazine is unable to pay its rent and may face eviction.
Guardian Life Insurance, the sub-landlord for the companys downtown Manhattan office, informed International Business Times Inc. in late November that it owed several hundred thousand dollars representing unpaid, delinquent rent and additional rent.
According an affidavit filed in New York County court in mid February, Guardian claims IBT currently owes the landlord $303,466 in rent…
The company had stopped paying other bills months ago, racking up what Guardian claimed in early December as an additional $309,229 invoice for various utilities and fees.
IBT stopped paying its electric bill in July 2016, stopped paying for condensed water in September 2016, and lagged in paying rent on-time every month since July 2016resulting in thousands of dollars worth of late fees.
As you might imagine, this dispute ended up in court. The landlord is demanding the company pay all back rent, fearful that it is about to go out of business. Newsweek is claiming it tried to settle that debt and its payment was rejected by Guardian (the landlord). Guardian admits Newsweek paid a portion of the money it owed but says it never paid the rest, an amount over $100,000. Meanwhile, Newsweek sought a temporary order to protect the company from being evicted:
Newsweek (which used to be owned by IAC, parent company of The Daily Beast) also got a temporary so-called Yellowstone restraining order to keep the company from being evicted…
The temporary restraining order runs out on Wednesday, allowing Guardian to take legal action against IBT that could result in potential eviction.
A real estate law expert who looked at the various filings told the Daily Beast, “From all that appears, the subtenant [Newsweek] doesnt have the money to pay and is trying to conjure up ways to delay eviction.”
The company has been laying off staff last week and this week and, according to sources who spoke to the Beast, editors were told more layoffs were imminent. The NY Post has a story about the high-profile firings which took place over the past few days:
Gersh Kuntzman a veteran editor who had grilled the magazines owners at a town hall meeting about the Manhattan district attorneys raid of Newsweeks offices last month, reportedly over alleged ad fraud, IRS tax liens and ties to a California-based church was fired Friday.
On Tuesday, national editor John Seeley was also let go, sources said. One insider said the bloodbath is not over in the wake of a stunning expose by Newsweek reporters and editors last week that detailed how Olivet University, a Bible college affiliated with Newsweeks corporate parent, offered free ads to Dutchess County officials as it sought tax breaks and permits for a new university there.
Theyre thinning the herd, said a source.
Given all of this, it certainly doesn’t sound as if this is a company likely to survive. But never underestimate the market for garbage hot takes that tell a segment of readers exactly what they want to hear.
:)
I dropped my subscription to Newsweek 45 years ago. They should have gone under far before now!
.
Fake news isn’t selling?
Alex Jones can buy them out and make the mag live up to its name!
.
At that time, they were ramping up their wall-to-wall coverage of Watergate. I think they did something like 78 covers on Nixon and Watergate, almost consecutively, from early 1973 through his resignation in 1974, and then after, beating the dead horse until the meat fell off the bone.
They were in their glory days then.
Newsweek’s unemployed leftist propagandists will soon be milling about in front of their old headquarters, carrying signs saying “Will lie for food.”
May, NewsWeak become one of many Fake News originators posing as news outlets, to go bankrupt in the next 7 years.
Best news I read all day.
Snooze Weak...wishes they were Fock Snooze
I wouldn’t even line my catbox with that liberal rag.
Shut it down....they contribute nothing positive to the discussion.
I remember Newsweak as being the far left weekly mag when I was in college in the late 70s. Had no use for it. So I’m not all that conflicted over its demise.
All I can say is....LOL LOL LOL LOL
Given the lousy articles they have been putting out recently, I’m surprised that they are even still in business. Newsweek sure has gone downhill.
John M. Must have liked her a lot. I used to watch the group religiously until the screeching liberal female showed up. Quit watching after that. Never been back.
It’s kinda like Sears. They used to have the biggest catalog business in the world. At one time, even in the early 1970’s, you could order virtually everything from them. I even ordered and received a replacement convertible ragtop for a 1967 Corvette I had in 1970 and installed it myself. If they had held on to that business and changed with the times, we wouldn’t even have heard of Amazon today.
Condensed water?
Remember that these “Newsy” shows like the old McLaughlin Group are there to entertain! If you think the exist to inform you are sadly mistaken. A screeching harridan like Eleanor Cliff is there to provide the noise to balance McLaughlin and George Will’s pomposity.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.