Left-leaning site the Intercept is reportedly running out of cash amid New York Times flap (2024)

Left-leaning news site the Intercept is reportedly in dire financial straits that could cause the nonprofit to shutter next year — as it attacks the New York Times over alleged bias in its Israel-Hamas war coverage.

The Intercept — co-founded by Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras a decade ago and originally financed by eBay billionaire founder Pierre Omidyar — is losing around $300,000 per month and could run out of money by May 2025, according to Semafor.

Last year, Omidyar cut his support and the site was spun off by its parent company, First Look Media, to become an independent nonprofit newsroom that could raise money from philanthropists as well as solicit donations from readers.

The spinoff was carried out with a grant of $14 million from First Look Media.

The Intercept is on track to have a balance of less than $1 million by November, Semafor reported.

The financial difficulties have fueled tension in the newsroom as the business side is seeking to rein in some of the site’s overtly left-wing coverage in hopes of attracting more funding — a development that has irked staffers who say it’s an encroachment on its editorial independence.

The Post has reached out to the Intercept for comment.

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One fundraising email sent out by the Intercept quoted the Times’ Israel correspondent Adam Rasgon about “how little the paper values Palestinian lives” during an interview for the publication’s “The Daily” podcast.

The Times is demanding that the Intercept issue a correction and apologize for mischaracterizing Rasgon’s quote to podcast host Michael Barbaro.

Separately, the Intercept called out the Gray Lady for killing an episode of “The Daily” that focused on a controversial Times story by Jeffrey Gettleman and freelancers which found Hamas had weaponized sexual violence in its attacks on Israel on Oct. 7.

On Monday, the Timesended its investigation into whether staffers leaked confidential information about its Gaza war coverage without any conclusive finding, executive editorJoe Kahntold staff, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The uproar at the Times is nothing compared to the seeming chaos at the Intercept over its possible impending doom.

Greenwald, who along with Poitras broke the Edward Snowden story, quit the organization in 2021 as it veered further to the left, alienating many of the donors it now seeks.

Interecept CEO Annie Chabel told Semafor that the site had a “stretch revenue goal that would allow us to continue into a longer horizon.”

Last October, Chabel told staffers that the news site was on track to meet its fundraising goals.

But since then, the Intercept has struggled to generate enough philanthropic donations. Earlier this year, the site laid off 30% of its staff.

Roger Hodge, the site’s editor-in-chief, was reportedly laid off after he and Chabel clashed over layoffs as well as his reluctance to work with the business side of the operation, according to Semafor.

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Hodge denied the claim, telling Semafor: “It’s simply not true that I resisted working with the fundraising operation.”

“I spent untold hours talking to them about the journalism and writing memos and have been helping to brainstorm how they could describe the work we’re doing,” he said.

“I spent way more time doing that than editing pieces.”

With no editor-in-chief, Chabel won approval from the board to restructure the organization so that the new top editor would report to the CEO rather than to the board.

Chabel then asked deputy editor Nausicaa Renner and senior news editor Ali Gharib to fill in as interim co-editors-in-chief while the company searched for a full-time successor to Hodge, Semafor reported.

Renner and Gharib both declined. A short time later, Renner resigned, according to Semafor.

Renner told Semafor that she found the editorial restructuring “disturbing” and that Chabel threatened the Intercept’s editorial independence.

“Editorial hires and priorities should not be determined by the CEO,” she said of Chabel.

“No matter what her politics are as an individual, the effect of her cuts and leadership is to quiet an outspoken outlet on Gaza.”

Four veteran journalists at the Intercept — co-founder Jeremy Scahill, Washington, DC, bureau chief Ryan Grim, editor Maryam Saleh and Gharib — then proposed that they form an interim committee that would run the site’s editorial side while it searched for a new editor-in-chief.

This proposal was rejected by the board.

Earlier this year, at an all-hands meeting, Scahill was highly critical of Chabel, saying she should resign.

Last week, it was reported that the Intercept hired former Los Angeles Times assistant managing editor Ben Muessig to be interim editor-in-chief — a decision that was not well received by staffers.

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Chabel told Semafor that “it’s not a surprise that there are some traditional funders who are not going to be interested in our particular brand of journalism.”

Still, she said it takes time for a nonprofit to find major donors.

Chabel said the Intercept occupies a “unique place” in the media landscape and that it can still find sources of funding even from those who don’t agree with everything it publishes.

“I think a lot of donors care about who is in power and the power is questioned, regardless of whether it’s left or right,” she said.

Meanwhile, the Intercept’s feud with the Times over the fundraising email stemmed from Rasgon’s comments on the deaths of the World Central Kitchen aid workers killed in a missile strike by the Israeli military.

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The WCK was founded by celebrity chef José Andrés.

“Frankly, I don’t think we would be having this conversation if a group of Palestinian aid workers had been killed,” the Intercept email quoted Rasgon as saying.

But the Times sent a note to the Intercept’s legal and fundraising teams accusing them of mischaracterizing Rasgon’s quote.

A transcript of the interview shows that Barbaro noted that “the speed with which Israel came out and said it was in the wrong here” was “not how Israel typically reacts to many of these situations.”

“I think it does have to do with this particular group,” Rasgon noted.

“This is a group that’s led by a celebrity chef, very high-profile, who has gone around the world to conflict zones, disaster areas, to provide food aid.”

Rasgon went on to say that he also believes “it has to do with the people who were killed, most of [whom] were Western foreign aid workers.”

“Frankly, I don’t think we would be having this conversation if a group of Palestinian aid workers had been killed,” he said.

Barbaro added that the Israeli government would not have reacted as well in the same manner.

“I would agree with that,” Rasgon said.

Left-leaning site the Intercept is reportedly running out of cash amid New York Times flap (2024)

FAQs

Is the intercept going out of business? ›

Now spun off from Omidyar's First Look Media, The Intercept is losing roughly $300,000 a month, is on track to have a balance of less than a million dollars by November — and could be completely out of cash by May 2025, according to data shared internally in March.

Who is the founder of the Intercept? ›

History. The Intercept was founded by journalists Glenn Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill, and Laura Poitras. It was launched in February 2014 by First Look Media with funding by eBay co-founder Pierre Omidyar. The publication initially reported on documents released by Edward Snowden.

How many employees does intercept have? ›

Intercept Pharmaceuticals has approximately 392 employees as of May 2024.

Who is the editor in chief of The Intercept? ›

Ben Muessig is interim Editor-in-Chief of The Intercept.

Is The Intercept a nonprofit? ›

As a standalone nonprofit, The Intercept will continue building a team to accomplish unsurpassed journalism. Our mission and our editorial zeal for hard-hitting journalism remains unchanged.

Who is the chief strategy officer of The Intercept? ›

Sumi Aggarwal - Chief Strategy Officer - The Intercept | LinkedIn.

Why intercept meaning? ›

to stop or catch something or someone that is on the way from one place to another so that it does not reach the intended place: to intercept a letter.

Who owns First Look Media? ›

First Look Media is an American nonprofit media organization founded by Pierre Omidyar in October 2013 as a venue for "original, independent journalism".

What is The Intercept in y + mx + b? ›

y = mx + b is the slope-intercept form of the equation of a straight line. In the equation y = mx + b, m is the slope of the line and b is the intercept.

What is intercept communications? ›

What is interception of communications? The interception of communications includes listening to someone's phone calls or opening and reading their messages.

What is The Intercept of a line? ›

The point where the line or curve crosses the axis of the graph is called intercept. If a point crosses the x-axis, then it is called the x-intercept. If a point crosses the y-axis, then it is called the y-intercept. The meaning of intercept of a line is the point at which it intersects either the x-axis or y-axis.

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