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Elizabeth Spiers
Elizabeth Spiers
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Elizabeth Spiers (born December 11, 1976) is an American web publisher and journalist, the founding editor of Gawker, a media gossip blog.

Key Information

From February 2011 until August 2012, she was the editor of The New York Observer.[1]

Early life and education

[edit]

Spiers was born in Wetumpka, Alabama. She attended Edgewood Academy, which she later characterized as a segregation academy.[2]

Spiers has written that she was "raped in college by an ostensibly nice guy who was not a stranger to me."[3]

After graduating from Duke University in 1999 with a degree in public policy, Spiers headed to Wall Street to work in finance, but soon became involved in the fast-growing blog industry.

Career

[edit]

Spiers began in journalism as the founding editor of Gawker.com and later became a contributing writer and editor at New York magazine. She has written for The New York Times, Salon, Fortune, Fast Company and The New York Post, among other publications, and was an early blogger at GNXP.[4]

She worked briefly after that as the editor-in-chief of mediabistro.com, a site offering resources for media professionals. Since then, Spiers has founded several blog sites through her company, Dead Horse Media (as in the proverb "don't beat a dead horse"). The New York Times' DealBook wrote of her in 2006: "It is clear that an online empire is on Elizabeth Spiers's mind."[5] Dead Horse Media has produced Dealbreaker, a gossip website about Wall Street; AbovetheLaw, a blog about law; Fashionista, a gossip site about fashion; and Supermogul, a now defunct business management site. Spiers left Dead Horse Media abruptly on April 19, 2007, citing differences with her partners over launching new properties, according to BusinessWeek.[6]

Jared Kushner hired Spiers as the editor of The New York Observer in February 2011.[7] She resigned from the paper in August 2012.[1] Spiers was the editorial director of Flavorwire from 2012 to 2016.[8]

On September 12, 2025, an article by Spiers was published in The Nation in response to the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk two days before.[9] The article was subsequently condemned by Vice President J.D. Vance who claimed it misrepresented Kirk's statements and justified political violence.[10]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Elizabeth Spiers is an American journalist, editor, and digital media entrepreneur best known as the founding editor of Gawker, an early influential blog launched in 2002 that popularized snarky, insider-driven commentary on media and culture. She holds a B.A. in Public Policy Studies and Political Science from Duke University and began her career as an equity analyst before transitioning to media.
Spiers co-founded Breaking Media, which publishes specialized outlets including Above the Law, Dealbreaker, and Fashionista, establishing her as a key figure in niche digital publishing. She served as editor-in-chief of the New York Observer and editorial director of Observer Media Group, roles in which she shaped coverage of , politics, and culture. As a contributor to outlets such as opinion section, , Fortune, and , Spiers has written on media trends, , and ; she also co-hosts the Slate Money podcast and has taught media innovation at NYU. Her work with contributed to the site's reputation for provocative journalism, including coverage that tested ethical boundaries in outing public figures and critiquing elite institutions, though Spiers has emphasized avoiding gratuitous personal attacks. Recognized as one of 's Most Influential Women in Technology, she continues as a and , founding The Insurrection for political polling and digital campaigns.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Elizabeth Spiers was born in , a small town with approximately 4,000 residents during her childhood, and was adopted shortly thereafter by local adoptive parents. Her adoptive father worked as a lineman for , a subsidiary of , in a working-class community near Wetumpka, where much of her extended adoptive family remained. Spiers' adoptive mother resided in the nearby area of Elmore, with the family maintaining close ties to the region, including relatives in Slapout. Spiers grew up in this rural Southern environment, taking early jobs such as clerking at Jasmine Hill Art Gallery and at the local Walmart in Wetumpka, reflecting the modest economic circumstances of her upbringing. In adulthood, she learned of her biological origins, meeting her biological mother—who is half-Mexican, of Indigenous descent, and a high school dropout—and discovering three previously unknown siblings. Spiers has described herself as the first in her adoptive family to attend college, highlighting the socioeconomic mobility she achieved relative to her immediate background.

Academic Pursuits

Elizabeth Spiers attended , where she majored in Public Policy Studies and . She earned a degree from the institution, completing her undergraduate studies prior to entering professional . While at Duke, Spiers held a work-study position at Perkins Library, where she shelved books in the library's lower levels. No records indicate pursuit of graduate-level education or extended academic research following her bachelor's degree.

Career

Founding and Editing Gawker

Elizabeth Spiers served as the founding editor of , launching the site in December 2002 alongside publisher as the flagship of . The blog targeted New York City's media and celebrity scenes, offering irreverent commentary on industry gossip and insider events. Spiers, then 25, drew from her prior personal blogging experience to shape Gawker's voice, emphasizing snarky, concise posts that captured the media fishbowl's absurdities. Under Spiers' editorship, introduced features like "Gawker Stalker," a crowdsourced compilation of celebrity sightings in , which evolved from simple lists into interactive reports enhancing reader engagement. The site's content prioritized brevity and wit, with posts often limited to 400 words or less, fostering a rapid, addictive reading experience that differentiated it from traditional media outlets. This approach quickly built a among media professionals and urban elites, establishing as a pioneer in digital gossip blogging. Spiers' tenure lasted from the launch through mid-2003, during which Gawker gained traction without significant advertising revenue initially, relying on Denton's funding and organic traffic growth. She departed in 2003 to freelance and contribute to outlets like New York magazine, leaving the site to subsequent editors who expanded its scope. Her foundational work set the template for Gawker's provocative style, influencing online media's shift toward unfiltered commentary, though it also sowed seeds for later ethical debates over privacy and sensationalism.

Leadership at New York Observer

In February 2011, Elizabeth Spiers was appointed editor-in-chief of , replacing Kyle Pope effective immediately, with responsibility for both print and digital content. She was hired by owner amid ongoing newsroom instability and staff departures, drawing on her background in from founding and other blogs to inject energy into the weekly newspaper. Spiers' tenure, spanning approximately 18 months until August 2012, focused on addressing high turnover that had eroded institutional knowledge and revitalizing the publication's sluggish operations. She introduced regular Friday editorial meetings to rebuild team cohesion and continuity among reporters. Under her direction, the Observer expanded its digital footprint, enhancing online engagement and content delivery to adapt to shifting media consumption patterns. By mid-2012, Spiers had also assumed the role of editorial director for Observer Media Group, overseeing the flagship paper alongside affiliated properties. Her efforts were credited with stabilizing and modernizing the outlet, though some observers noted inconsistent impact on print prominence. Spiers departed at the end of August 2012 to launch a new venture, succeeded by executive editor Aaron Gell as interim leader.

Later Editorial and Writing Roles

Following her departure from the New York Observer in August 2012, Spiers served briefly as acting editorial director for Flavorpill Productions, a media company focused on event listings and cultural content, until the fall of that year. Spiers transitioned to freelance writing and opinion journalism, contributing essays to outlets such as , , The New York Review of Books, and . She became a contributing opinion writer for , producing pieces on media dynamics, , and cultural issues, with publications continuing into 2024. In addition to print and digital writing, Spiers joined the Slate Money podcast as co-host alongside and Emily Peck, where the trio analyzes weekly developments in business, finance, and markets; the program, which debuted in 2014, features her commentary on topics ranging from trends to labor economics. She has also authored articles for The Nation on political and media subjects as of 2025. In 2018, Spiers co-founded The Insurrection, a Medium-based offering progressive analysis of U.S. and Trump-era events, serving as an advisor and contributor. These roles reflect her shift toward independent commentary and multimedia content creation rather than full-time editorial leadership.

Digital Strategy and Consulting

In 2016, Spiers founded The Insurrection, a progressive firm that leverages data analytics to provide services in digital strategy, messaging, voter targeting, and polling for Democratic and left-leaning clients. The firm emerged in the lead-up to the 2016 U.S. presidential election, emphasizing empirical targeting methods over traditional polling models, with Spiers drawing on her media background to integrate content distribution tactics into political campaigns. Parallel to her political work, Spiers developed a broader consulting practice, specializing in the launch and scaling of online publications and startups. Her offerings include editorial planning, revenue model design, audience acquisition strategies, and go-to-market execution, informed by her experience founding and Breaking Media properties like Above the Law and Dealbreaker. Clients have included media outlets and tech ventures, where she has advised on content-led growth amid shifting ad revenue dynamics, such as the decline of display advertising and rise of subscription models post-2010s. Spiers has also served in fractional roles, such as for select organizations, and as a mentor for accelerator programs, guiding early-stage digital companies on and editorial integrity. Her approach prioritizes data-verified user engagement metrics over anecdotal trends, reflecting a causal focus on retention drivers like niche content verticals, as evidenced by her prior launches of sites including Flavorwire, Crushable, and The Gloss between 2008 and 2012. By 2020, her consulting extended to opinion platforms and podcasts, where she consulted on audience expansion amid platform algorithm changes.

Political Views and Commentary

Ideological Alignment

Elizabeth Spiers' ideological positions have shifted over time, beginning with libertarian leanings and progressing toward left-of-center views. In her early twenties, she identified as socially liberal and fiscally conservative, reflecting a libertarian orientation during her initial professional experiences in media. By the time of her college graduation around 1999, Spiers described herself as more liberal yet retaining conservative elements, self-identifying specifically as a socially liberal libertarian. Spiers later transitioned politically, moving from a college Republican affiliation to registering as a Democrat, a change she attributed to broader experiences in and media. In contemporary self-assessments, she states that her views now skew very progressive, though less extreme than some peers in her professional network. This alignment manifests in her explicit support for positions such as pro-choice policies and , which she has affirmed in personal writings as core to her New York-based liberal identity. Her professional endeavors reinforce this progressive orientation, including founding The Insurrection, a data-driven firm focused on digital strategy for progressive media and political clients, and consulting for left-leaning organizations. Conservative observers and outlets have characterized her as left-wing, particularly in response to her opinion pieces critiquing figures like and conservative activists. Such assessments, while partisan, align with the tenor of her published commentary in outlets like and , where she advocates for Democratic strategies and critiques right-leaning cultural phenomena.

Key Opinions and Influences

Spiers' political opinions have evolved from youthful conservatism to a pragmatic left-of-center stance. In a December 2024 New York Times column, she recounted idolizing and embracing 1980s cultural during her adolescence, drawing parallels to the enthusiasm of modern MAGA youth for drawing stark cultural and ideological lines. Earlier, in her early twenties, she described herself as a socially liberal, fiscally conservative libertarian, shaped by her initial post-college role at a startup amid the dot-com boom. By the mid-2010s, following Donald Trump's 2016 election, she identified a shortfall in effective left-leaning media and launched The Insurrection consulting firm to emulate right-wing media's organizational prowess in mobilizing supporters and countering narratives, rather than relying solely on traditional journalistic detachment. Her commentary often critiques institutional shortcomings on both sides while favoring empirical strategy over idealism. In a July 2024 New York Times opinion piece, Spiers argued that Democrats must discard romanticized ""-style fantasies of governance, emphasizing that electoral success demands ruthless prioritization of winnable issues over moral purity, as evidenced by Republican gains in states hampered by suppression tactics. She has also highlighted generational disillusionment, noting in an August 2025 column how her cohort's neoliberal optimism has faltered amid economic stagnation, urging adaptation to populist realities rather than Boomer-era denial. These views reflect a toward elite bubbles, informed by her Southern upbringing in , where she observed voter suppression and under-resourced potential in red states. Influences on Spiers' thinking blend personal hardship, regional context, and media experimentation. Family experiences, including her brother's repeated incarcerations as a struggling with and post-service, shifted her from abstract toward grounded assessments of policy failures in systems. Her early tenure drew from the irreverent, voice-driven blogging of the early , prioritizing audience engagement over institutional norms, a style she credits with amplifying outsider perspectives but later tempered by ethical reflections on . Professionally, she cites the tactical successes of conservative outlets like Breitbart as models for left-leaning digital strategy, advocating data-driven content that builds loyalty through consistent worldview reinforcement rather than sporadic outrage. This pragmatic turn underscores her emphasis on causal mechanisms in , prioritizing measurable impact over ideological signaling.

Controversies and Criticisms

Gawker's Ethical Legacy

Gawker's founding under Elizabeth Spiers from 2002 to 2003 introduced a model of centered on snarky, insider commentary about the New York media scene, prioritizing irreverence over traditional ethical restraints such as objectivity and minimization of harm. Spiers, then 25, crafted posts that were arch and judgmental, often blending with observations, as seen in features like "Gawker Stalker," which crowdsourced celebrity sightings and encounters, blurring lines between and . This approach, while innovative in establishing blogs as cultural watchdogs, was critiqued early on for embodying a "rage of the creative ," where the site's rising influence amplified attacks on declining media figures, fostering a tone of over substantive reporting. The ethical framework Spiers helped instill—self-referential and unapologetically partisan—deviated from journalistic norms by eschewing verification for value and treating subjects with disdain rather than detachment. Critics noted that under its initial editorship appeared as a "reprehensible bully" when targeting lower-status insiders, exploiting power imbalances in the media ecosystem without regard for proportionality or fairness. Spiers' content, produced at a pace of up to 12 posts daily, emphasized "radical Manhattanism," a hyper-local cynicism that normalized personal as commentary, setting precedents for later expansions into broader incursions. Although no major legal scandals emerged during her tenure, this foundational sensibility contributed to 's reputation for inconsistency in deeming material newsworthy, a flaw Spiers herself later acknowledged pained her amid the site's evolution. Gawker's enduring ethical legacy, traceable to Spiers' blueprint, influenced by validating and boundary-testing as viable strategies, but at the cost of eroding public trust in online . The site's disregard for conventions like and harm assessment—evident from its in blurring public and private spheres—culminated in high-profile failures, such as the 2016 verdict awarding $140 million for privacy invasion, though these occurred post-Spiers. Spiers has defended the early iteration as distinct, focused narrowly on media without the broader excesses that followed under , yet the initial tone of unfiltered judgmentalism arguably primed for such overreach, prioritizing audience engagement over accountability. This legacy underscores a causal tension in early culture: through provocation versus the systemic risks of ethical shortcuts in pursuit of virality.

Backlash to Specific Writings

In September 2025, Spiers published an opinion piece in titled "Charlie Kirk's Legacy Deserves No Mourning," written in the immediate aftermath of conservative activist Charlie Kirk's assassination. In the essay, Spiers characterized Kirk as a "white Christian nationalist provocateur" whose career promoted "hate, bigotry, and division" rather than , arguing that conventional norms should not apply to figures whose legacies she viewed as detrimental to democratic norms. She emphasized prioritizing factual assessment over polite euphemisms, stating that Kirk's organization had amplified partisan extremism, including election denialism and cultural grievances, without substantive policy contributions. The piece elicited sharp criticism from conservative commentators, who accused Spiers of insensitivity and malice toward a recently assassinated figure. Outlets described it as "spewing venom" against Kirk's memory, framing her refusal to mourn as an endorsement of or a dehumanizing attack on a victim of left-wing . Critics contended that the timing—mere days after Kirk's death on September 10, 2025—exploited tragedy for partisan point-scoring, potentially inciting further division amid heightened tensions over the , which authorities attributed to ideological motives. Spiers responded to the backlash by reiterating that her essay explicitly condemned violence, stating "no one should ever be killed for their views," and defended it as an exercise in unflinching truth-telling rather than an . The controversy amplified calls from Kirk's allies, including Trump administration figures, to scrutinize left-leaning media and sources, with some linking Spiers' to broader patterns of perceived disdain for conservative voices. While supporters praised the piece for challenging hagiographic tendencies in political , detractors highlighted it as emblematic of polarized media incentives that prioritize provocation over reconciliation post-tragedy.

Accusations of Bias

Spiers has faced accusations of left-wing bias primarily from conservative media outlets and commentators, who cite her opinion pieces and editorial history as evidence of partisan slant against conservatives. In a September 13, 2025, article for following the death of conservative activist , Spiers described him as a "white Christian nationalist provocateur" who preached "hate, bigotry, and division" and sought to impose "church-run morality and ." Conservative critics, including The Commune Magazine, condemned the piece as "venomous" and reflective of a "personal vendetta" laced with "mockery and disdain," arguing it distorted Kirk's legacy rather than offering fair assessment. Twitchy similarly accused Spiers of "mangling" Kirk's message to undermine his contributions, portraying her writing as emblematic of broader left-wing media hostility toward conservative figures. Such critiques align with characterizations of Spiers as a "left-of-center" journalist by outlets like InfluenceWatch, which highlight her consulting work for progressive Democrats and contributions to left-leaning publications. These accusations often frame her as part of an establishment media ecosystem prone to systemic ideological tilt, though Spiers has acknowledged human bias in journalism while defending the need for factual rigor over ideological purity. Earlier in her career, Spiers' founding role at drew indirect criticism for fostering a culture of snarky, hypocrisy-highlighting commentary that conservatives viewed as disproportionately targeting right-leaning figures and institutions, though her brief tenure (2002–2003) focused more on media gossip than overt partisanship. During her editorship of the New York Observer (2011–2012), owned by , some observers questioned potential influences on coverage amid the paper's evolving stance, but explicit bias claims against her personally were limited compared to later opinion work.

Personal Life

Family and Residence

Spiers was born on December 11, 1976, in , where she grew up. She has described reconnecting later in life with her birth mother, who is of and Indigenous descent, along with biological siblings, noting shared family traits such as late-onset graying hair. Spiers married later in life and became a mother to a son born around 2016; she has written that she did not initially expect to marry or have children but values these roles. Her husband remains unnamed in public sources, though she has referenced family activities involving chess, with her son viewing her husband as highly skilled in the game. As of 2025, Spiers and her family reside in the area, with her child living in . She has professional ties to , where she teaches.

References

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