An Aggregation of News from the 1up.com Purchase Continued…
Karen Chu, formerly of 1up.com, gives some inside skinny on the inner workings of Ziff Davis:
To be honest, Ziff has a lot to be blamed as well.
Some inside skinny:
Quote:
ZD was fucking with UGO pretty hard. Hiding information, taking the negotiations on an off again and again, UGO was making their best guess.Plus, Ziff had been misleading everyone on just how successful 1up really was. Now, knowing ziff and knowing ugo wants to put the prettiest bow on the huge turd of a take over, I’m sure there’s something in the middle.
ugo was going to cut the staff anyway, but not knowing who did what, they made their best guesses based on what ziff let them know
And mind you, Ziff’s headquarters are in NY. While I was working at 1UP, it never felt like we were part of Ziff proper. And because of the distance, I’m pretty sure the higher-ups really had no concrete idea of the people who worked in the Game Group. Shady corporate bull.
Stephen Totilo of MTV Multiplayer gives UGO’s side of the story.
If UGO hadn’t bought 1UP, things could have been a lot worse. That’s what the company’s CEO told me in an interview that began with me asking: “How do you like being a bad guy”?
***
How do you like being a bad guy? That’s the first question I asked J Moses, CEO of the UGO Entertainment today, in an interview that I hoped would clear the air or at least tell the other side of the story that’s been lighting up gaming sites for the last 24 hours: the shutdown of Electronic Gaming Monthly, the firing of about 30 1UP.com employees and the purchase of 1up by UGO.
“How am I a bad guy?” Moses replied from his end of the phone. “I’m a great guy.”
On a day that many gamers are vilifying his company, Moses sounded upbeat. The reason: because he states unequivocally that his company just saved 1UP.
“We have just hired 24 people,” he said. “At a time where all you read about is layoffs we have expanded UGO by 33 percent. I don’t know of any content companies out there expanding their workforce. We did that because our business is robust and growing.”
While some gamers are lamenting what they see is a UGO-engineered gutting of 1UP, Moses argues that that interpretation is wrong. “The simple reality is that we only wanted to buy 1UP and related sites. That was our interest. We’re a dot-com company and that’s all we’ve ever been for 11 years. I’ve personally have always been a huge fan of 1UP. I’m thrilled to buy it through Hearst/UGO.”
But, I told him, some fans might argue back: why didn’t you leave it alone?
“We really have largely left it alone,” Moses replied. “We kept, we believe, the core editorial group that can continue to do great things. What we’re adding is 1up.com as an editorial site that will sit on top of the UGO publishing site. And we kept who we believe are the critical people who can make up a great site.”
Moses explains the departure of many of the people let go yesterday as the result of Ziff-directed cutting of EGM staff. UGO wasn’t trying to buy EGM, he said, so he believes that “Closing EGM has absolutely nothing to do with UGO.”
But what many gamers have reacted to is an apparent loss of 1UP’s key podcasts, shows such as 1UP Yours and the 1UP Show. “I think you will continue to see video-casts and podcasts,” Moses said. “It may not be on the exact same schedule that it was. It may not be the exact same people. But it will continue being a part of 1UP.”
Asked if 1UP Yours and the 1UP Show specifically would continue, Moses said that those decisions are still being worked through between UGO and the 1UP editorial team. What’s not encouraging for fans of those shows is the departure of the 1UP Show’s producers and one of 1UPyours’ key voices, Shane Bettenhausen. About those personnel, Moses deferred to continuing 1UP editorial director Sam Kennedy as the decision-maker about how and with whom those shows would continue. Moses did call out one person, though: “We would have loved to have had Shane join us, but Shane had other opportunities that we were informed of before we bought the site.”
(Reached for comment, Bettenhausen said he wasn’t ready to announce his new gig just yet.)
Interviewed by phone separately, Kennedy said that the Retronauts podcast will continue and that there are “some possibilities” with 1UPyours. The fate of the 1UPshow seems more up in the air.
Kennedy acknowledged that the loss of so many talented gaming reporters and personalities is a blow but drew an analogy to Saturday Night Live’s many cast changes and rebirths. He said 1UP’s voice can continue: “We’re real. We’re honest. That will never die with 1UP… We’ll introduce new stars along the way. Well try to keep people in the family if we can… as long as I’m here and all the other great people who are part of 1up here we will continue to do what we have done.”
Moses said he was expecting the reaction that has come, the anger and frustration online “I was prepared for it. The situation is what it is. A lot of people lost their jobs yesterday which was really unfortunate. But UGO was the cause of none of it. What we did is we offered 24 people jobs who may not have had jobs otherwise.
For now Moses says he thinks that most of 1UPs’ audience is in a “wait and see” mode. He hears the vocal people who are unhappy but believes that, over time, UGO will keep 1UP’s spirit intact. “Make no mistake about it, we are very intent on becoming the leader in the games space and we think, with 1Up, we are knocking on the door.”
Moses said that the 1Up site will continue to function without interruption.
Glad to know that Shane Bettenhausen is already on his feet, though I will surely miss his presence in the 1up network. I hope he continues to do 1up yours every week.
Former 1uppers Phillip Kollar, Nick Suttner, Anthony Gallegos, Ryan O’Donnell, and Matt Chandronait start their new podcast ‘Rebel FM’ in the spirit of 1up FM. Good for them! I’d like to also mention that within a few hours of their release from 1up, all of their Twitter feeds exploded with well wishes – 500+ ON AVERAGE. They now currently sit at about 1500 twitter followers each – that is the power of the 1up community.
Former VP of 1up, Simon Cox (who was also laid off) and his comments toward the ordeal:
James ‘Milky’ Mielke’s farewell blog and unveiling of the final issue EGM - a fitting Street Fighter IV exclusive cover story.
Dan ‘Shoe’ Hsu and Crispin Boyer’s analysis and sendoff of EGM from their Sore Thumbs Blog (which I hope becomes a new hub for the ex-1up Folk):
Goodbye EGM
By Shoe and Crispin
A quick time-out from the Ex-EGM Awards Ceremonies — a crapload of our buddies and former co-workers just got laid off this week because UGO took over the 1UP Network, and it didn’t seem right to be celebrating 2008 when 2009’s busy smacking our jaws with a lead pipe. We’ll finish up those awards in a bit….
Crispin and I are both extremely sorry to see these fine people lose their jobs, but we’re not terribly worried. We know they’re talented people with great resumes from working there, so they should be back working 80-hour work weeks for some other website or magazine soon enough. We just hope this economy cooperates with that theory.
Another unfortunate casualty is EGM itself. Its 20-year run came to an abrupt end with a blurry Wolverine cover (January 2009 issue) because UGO didn’t want it and Ziff couldn’t afford to keep printing it. EGM is just dead, dead, dead…gone forever…a legendary magazine that had its place in gaming history but is to be no more.
I know the guys are super bummed that the real last issue (Feb. 2009…originally planned with Street Fighter IV on the cover — a fitting end and tribute to the kabillions of SF covers in EGM’s past) won’t get to sit up on newsstands next to the latest Cat Fancy or OK or whatever the hell is still surviving in this tough magazine market. I heard a lot of great articles — including a kick-ass 20-year retrospective feature — was supposed to go into that month. The goods should show up online, though, so stay tuned to 1UP.com for that. But I don’t know if that will make the editors and writers any less mad at their former bosses who apparently knew that issue was never going to be printed, led the team to believe otherwise, and never told them until it was too late…making them work a hellish, frantic deadline for nothing.
EGM’s last issue, which will never see print. Read more about EGM’s final days on Milky’s blog. Also, 1UP just put up the original cover story, so now you can read it for free, you cheapskates.
Anyways, like Jeff said ever so bluntly like he does so well, the 1UP Network won’t be the same without some of the talent that has left and without EGM by its side (not to mention the long-gone CGW!). That doesn’t mean they won’t do well in the future under new management, though. They still have a kick-ass team (Jeremy Parish might be able to take on GameSpot all by himself), so we’ll stay tuned…although the word is several people that are still on board may not be for a lot longer, being extremely upset with current conditions and all… (hey old buddies, just count to 10…or maybe 1,000…and don’t forget what the economy looks like out there).
It just stinks we can’t have the officially last EGM to hold, read, and keep. Another Ziff Davis mag whose life got cut short without even a chance for a goodbye issue (see Computer Gaming World…screw calling it “Games for Windows Magazine”…it’ll always be CGW to me).
A lot of people out there are lashing out at UGO and its parent company Hearst for the layoffs and for EGM’s closing, but trust me…you’re barking at the wrong suits. I don’t need to say much more, because Jeff Green (former Editor-in-Chief of CGW) says it all on his must-read blog (MTV Multiplayer also sheds some light on this). In addition to everything Jeff said, do know that Ziff Davis Media was burdened with this unbelievable debt that made it near impossible for it to achieve its goals with the 1UP Network. Kill IGN or GameSpot with 1UP’s traffic? Kill Game Informer/PC Gamer with EGM/CGW’s circulations? Not with every penny you’re making going back toward massive interest payments. It was like trying to scoop out all the water in the ocean with a PlayStation 3. Why did so many people leave there over the last two years? A lot of us knew this was coming.
The post also features a walk down memory lane with their favorite memories of their former work place.
Another unfortunate casualty is EGM itself. Its 20-year run came to an abrupt end with a blurry Wolverine cover (January 2009 issue) because UGO didn’t want it and Ziff couldn’t afford to keep printing it. EGM is just dead, dead, dead…gone forever…a legendary magazine that had its place in gaming history but is to be no more.

