DHAKA: The news site Gawker.com will shut down next week, just days after its parent company was purchased by Univision.
Gawker founder Nick Denton told staff on Thursday afternoon, a post on its website said.
Media firm Univision agreed to buy Gawker Media for $135m (£103m) at a bankruptcy auction, reports the BBC.
Gawker filed for bankruptcy after losing a $140m privacy lawsuit brought by former wrestler Hulk Hogan, paid for by Paypal co-founder Peter Thiel.
Thiel funded Hogan’s case saying he wanted to curb the company’s ‘bullying’, after the site published an article that outed Thiel as gay.
Founded 14 years ago, Gawker is known for its no-holds-bar approach to reporting, including breaking gossip stories on high-powered celebrities and business leaders.
Univision is most commonly known in the US as the country's biggest Spanish-language media company. It also owns a 40 percent stake in the satirical website The Onion.
In a memo to his staff, Denton said: "Sadly, neither I nor Gawker.com, the buccaneering flagship of the group I built with my colleagues, are coming along for this next stage.
He added that he would move out of the news and gossip business but “work to make the web a forum for the open exchange of ideas and information”.
A US bankruptcy court later approved Univision’s purchase of Gawker Media, which owns seven websites in total.
They are: Gawker.com, Deadspin, Lifehacker, Gizmodo, Kotaku, Jalopnik, and Jezebel.
The post on Gawker’s website said plans for future coverage and its website’s archives had not yet been finalized.
Gawker employees took to Twitter to express their sadness about the decision to shut down the sites.
“Our other sites, including Kotaku, live on, but losing the vibrant Gawker.com hurts,” tweeted Stephen Totilo, editor-in-chief of Kotaku.
Bobby Finger, a staff writer for Jezabel, tweeted, “I’m one of countless people who owes Gawker so, so, so much.”
Another staff writer, Jordan Sargent, wrote: “Gawker is dead because Peter Thiel (w the help of Charles harder) has succeeded in creating a world where owning gawker is simply not viable.”
Former Gawker reporter Sam Biddle wrote simply, “I am heartbroken”.
Earlier this year Gawker was sued by Hulk Hogan, whose real name is Terry Bollea, after the website published a video of Hogan having sex with the wife of a friend from 2007.
A three-week trial ended with the jury ruling in the former wrestler’s favour and ordering Gawker to pay $115m in compensation and $25m in punitive damage.
Gawker asked the judge for a new trial, but that request was rejected. Many experts though expect that the original verdict will be overturned on appeal.
BDST: 0915 HRS, AUG 19, 2016
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