‘It pivoted into oblivion’: BuzzFeed sold off the company behind ‘Hot Ones’ to pay down its debt

A decade ago, BuzzFeed was redefining what news and entertainment on the web meant. The website’s mix of hard-hitting news, in-depth features, and viral listicles offered a vision of the future for journalism that many sought to follow. (I should know: I was a regular freelancer for the company.)

In 2014, BuzzFeed closed a $50 million round of investment from Andreessen Horowitz that valued the company at around $850 million. Around 150 million people worldwide visited the website every month, and the newsroom racked up some impressive accolades, most notably a Pulitzer Prize in 2021.

But a lot has changed since then. That news division is long gone, the company has undergone a series of layoffs, and just this month it sold off its golden goose for $82.5 million in order to meet a debt obligation. First We Feast, the BuzzFeed-owned media company behind the hit show Hot Ones, will now be owned by a consortium led by George Soros.

As one social media user put it, “That a dude with a couple cameras and a plate of appetizers can make something worth $82.5 million and a media company looks at that and goes ‘couldn’t we make even more money if we had AI do it?’ tells you exactly how stupid these people are.”

What gives?

“BuzzFeed was a media company that investors bought into expecting a tech company,” says Tom Phillips, the former U.K. editorial director for the site. “And they’re just very different businesses. Media is expensive, low margin, and hard to scale up rapidly.”

Trying to bridge the gap between buzzy tech company and functionally run business has long been a problem for BuzzFeed. That’s at both the high level, and the granular one—several former staff members have lamented the company’s excessive (and costly) office catering—but were useful to convince advertisers the company was the real deal.

Besides the spending, there was a fundamental dichotomy between BuzzFeed the media brand and BuzzFeed the tech company, according to those who worked there. “BuzzFeed really was a good media company that hired great people and produced some amazing work, and it could have been sustainable,” says Phillips. “But it always felt like they were chasing expectations around growth and return that they couldn’t realistically meet.” Phillips says those growth and return expectations in the frothy mid-2010s were overblown and unrealizable for even the biggest actual tech companies at the time, never mind a media company that some conceived of as a tech firm. Thus BuzzFeed’s continued contraction over time, resulting most recently in the sale of First We Feast and its Hot Ones show, where celebrities are interviewed as they eat spicy chicken wings.

James Ball, who worked at BuzzFeed’s U.K. branch until 2017, believes it could have built a sustainable business from either of its core branches: the main BuzzFeed listicle vertical, or BuzzFeed News, its journalism arm. But trying to meet unrealistic investor expectations doomed the company. “It never focused on building a good business, but just endlessly pivoted to try to do the impossible, until it pivoted into oblivion,” he says. “The BuzzFeed that exists now is a zombie business. It’s almost sadder to see it limp on like this than if it had just shut down with some dignity.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91248830/buzzfeed-sold-off-hot-ones-company-pay-down-debt?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 8mo | Dec 19, 2024, 12:20:07 PM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Palantir, Nvidia stocks slip as Wall Street edges away from its records

Wall Street is edging lower on Tuesday following drops for Palantir and other stars that had been riding the mania surrounding artificial i

Aug 19, 2025, 8:20:07 PM | Fast company - tech
This free AI tool wants to make divorce less complicated

Since its founding in 2018, Hello Divorce has aimed to make the divorce process less stressful and more cost-effective. The startup helps spouses accurately

Aug 19, 2025, 3:40:06 PM | Fast company - tech
AI study tool Cubby Law looks to boost law students’ GPAs

Law school can be notoriously competitive, with post-graduation job opportunities heavily dependent on grade point average. GPAs are determined

Aug 19, 2025, 3:40:05 PM | Fast company - tech
Clippy is back—this time as a mascot for Big Tech protests

Clippy has become an unlikely protest symbol against Big Tech. 

The trend started when YouTuber Louis Rossmann ">posted a video

Aug 19, 2025, 3:40:04 PM | Fast company - tech
Social media is dead. Meta has admitted as much. What now?

Back in March, Facebook introduced a new feature that wasn’t exactly new. The Friends tab—de

Aug 19, 2025, 1:20:12 PM | Fast company - tech
Diagnostic AI is powerful—but doctors are irreplaceable

Microsoft captured global attention with a recent announcement that its new

Aug 19, 2025, 1:20:11 PM | Fast company - tech
Why Japan’s 7-Elevens are the hottest new tourist attraction

Forget the Shibuya Crossing or Mount Fuji; tourists in Japan are adding convenience stores to their travel itineraries.

Thanks to

Aug 19, 2025, 11:10:06 AM | Fast company - tech