Home » Autoblog, As We Know It, Is Dead

Autoblog, As We Know It, Is Dead

Autoblog Dead Ts4
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I’m getting sick of writing obits for media properties I once enjoyed and, in fact, I’ve glossed over a few of them because it’s too sad. The near-term departure of Autoblog, however? I can’t in good conscience ignore the passing of a website that was so important to so many people, including myself.

What I currently know, based on a post on LinkedIn, is that the site has been sold and everyone has been told they’re going to be fired. This wasn’t due to anyone doing anything wrong, rather, it’s because the parent company said they were going to fire everyone as part of a sale to a different company.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Even if a few people manage to stick around a little longer, the departure of all the full-time staff of Autoblog is a terrible moment in modern automotive history and worth recording since the site celebrated its 20th anniversary just a couple of months ago. There’s no reporting on this and I’m not sure how public the news is, but I’m quite sure I’m not telling any secrets here.

I actually found out about this from longtime Autoblog contributor/editor and current Autopian contributor Sam Abuelsamid who noted it on LinkedIn with this post:

It’s been just shy of 18 years since I started transitioning from working as an engineer to writing professionally about the auto industry first as a journalist, than a PR flack and now as an analyst. That transition began with Autoblog and the now defunct AutoblogGreen where I got to cover a lot of big stories including the debut and development of the original Chevrolet Volt. Over the course of four years, I wrote more than 7,000 posts that appeared on the site including news, interviews, vehicle reviews, opinion pieces and deep dive technical reviews.

Autoblog just recently celebrated its 20th anniversary and I found out some sad news the other day. Apollo Global which acquired Yahoo (including the former AOL properties ) from Verizon has sold off Autoblog and the current staff have been informed that September 13 will be the final day for Autoblog in its current form. Arena Group, the new owners haven’t announced what they plan to do with the brand, but given what we’re seeing across a lot of other once respected brands like CNet, I wouldn’t be surprised if they just start churning out a lot AI generated slop. That would be a real shame for a site that many of us put a hell of a lot of effort into building from nothing into a respected automotive media outlet. David Thomas John Neff Sebastian Blanco Alex Nunez Dan Roth Damon Lavrinc Pete Bigelow Michael Harley Jeremy Korzeniewski Chris Shunk Drew Phillips and many others contributed to building something really cool back in the day. I’m proud to have been a part of it

If you’re in the industry, or even just a more-than-casual reader, that list of names is incredible and goes to show the massive impact the site over the last two decades.

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Autoblog 2007 New

While there were many car news sources in existence when Autoblog launched, it took years for most of them to catch up to what Autoblog and Jalopnik were doing.  Autoblog was one of the first purely online sites to regularly review cars. It was one of the first sites to play ball with automakers and publish embargoed information.

For almost a decade, if you were reading about car news on the internet you were almost certainly getting it from Autoblog or Jalopnik. The site is still one of the biggest car news sites on the web.

What’s Happening Here?

Ab In 2009 New

To understand what happened you need to understand a little bit more about the site’s many, many parent companies.

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The site was initially launched as part of the larger Weblogs, Inc. network by Jason Calacanis in 2003. This was the slightly more straight-laced counter to Gawker Media’s tabloid attitude. Some of the biggest sites when Weblogs launched were Engadget, Autoblog, and Joystiq.

Autoblog 20008

Calacanis and his investors, probably wisely, got out early enough in the blog era when the company was sold to then AOL Time Warner. The Time Warner part only lasted until 2009 when AOL was spun off from Time Warner. For reasons that make no sense in retrospect, AOL bought The Huffington Post for more than $300 million, and a bunch of the old Weblog brands that still existed were either shuttered or pushed into more popular verticals.

Autoblog 2011

This era of the company was quite rocky, and AOL was eventually purchased by Verizon, which also bought Yahoo!, to create one big media company. Verizon spent about $9 billion acquiring both companies and then, when they realized this still didn’t make sense, sold it for about $5 billion to investment firm Apollo Management Group (which owns pieces of everything from the company that makes the Godzilla movies to the company that owns Wagamama) three years ago.

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Did you get the timeline of different parent companies?
Weblogs->AOL Time Warner->AOL->AOL Huffington Post->Yahoo/Verizon->Apollo

At this point, the only two original Weblog Inc. sites left were Engadget and Autoblog, though some still exist as AI zombie sites.

I need a cigarette after all that, though I’m not done.

Apollo Group is in the process of selling Yahoo!/AOL to Arena Group, which also owns a bunch of other media properties and is in a lawsuit with Sports Illustrated over a potentially scuttled takeover. What’s next? No idea. As part of the sale, Yahoo allegedly told all or most of its editorial employees they were losing their jobs but, in theory, it’s possible some could be rehired by the parent company.

I just want to stop and applaud the journalists at Autoblog for continuing to produce often great work under what I’m sure were sometimes less-than-ideal conditions. Now that this is out of the way, a little story of Autoblog from my perspective as a competitor/friend.

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Autoblog Was There First

Ab In 2004

I should be honest. There was a brief time in my life when I’d have been a little happy about this news. I’m not proud of this, but I’m sure none of my good friends who worked at Autoblog would be surprised as I worked for Autoblog‘s longest and most aggressive competitor for a number of years.

The peak of my antagonism (or nadir of goodwill and common sense) probably came at the Detroit Auto Show in 2008 or 2009. I’d been working at Jalopnik as a writer for a couple of years, and I remember running back and forth from reveals to my laptop in order to get posts up so I could attain the make-or-break link from social aggregator website Digg.

I don’t even remember the specific car, but I was sure that I’d beaten Autoblog to the story by about 12 minutes. I’m equally sure this was due to both my ability to quickly write and my complete disregard for anything remotely resembling copyediting. For whatever reason, Autoblog got the Digg link. I was quite upset. In retrospect, it’s a little embarrassing, and I’m happy to report that in the years that were to follow we mostly calmed down or, often, just decided to be assholes to MotorTrend for reasons that also make little sense in retrospect.

It was the aughts! What can I tell you? It was a different time.

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If my memory is correct, Autoblog was larger by both staff and traffic than Jalopnik for most of the time that I worked at the site. It was a big deal when we had more pageviews at the end of the month, largely because it didn’t happen every month.

Autoblog also got there first. Nick Denton may have helped popularize the blog itself with Gizmodo and Gawker back in 2002, but Autoblog debuted in June 2004, approximately six months before Jalopnik.

I highly suggest you listen to this podcast with the original Jalopnik editor Mike Spinelli and early and long-serving Autoblog editor John Neff. In Neff’s view, by being called Autoblog, the responsibility for the site was to be something like the New York Times of cars. Jalopnik, with its ridiculous portmanteau name, was something more like the New York Daily News or MAD Magazine.

Over the roughly 10 years I worked at Jalopnik I got to see an amazing group of talented writers and editors lead Autoblog, expand into video (with the great The List with the late Jessi Combs, Chris Paukert, Graham Suorsa, and Patrick Mcintyre, and Translogic with Bradley Hasemeyer and Lora Cain), and break a lot of news. I almost don’t even want to name them all because I’m sure I’ll forget some. Sam captured many of them above, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t shoutout Damon, Alex, David, Zack, and Drew, specifically because I was often jealous of the great work they did and, for whatever reason, they still talk to me. In fact, I’m looking forward to grabbing a drink with at least a couple of old AB pals back at Pebble this week.

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What’s Next?

I wish I could tell you. Autoblog is still publishing and I hope they can continue to do so for at least a little longer. Jalopnik itself has gone through its share of tumultuous ownership changes recently and is actively for sale.

Even though they’re both technically competitors with this site, the web has changed a lot in the intervening years. It’s been clear for a long time that there’s plenty of room for all of us, and it’s a better car web for enthusiasts when there are a lot of great sites, not just a few. Fingers crossed that whatever happens next preserves both the staff and spirit of these sites.

All screenshots via the Wayback Machine.

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Wayne G
Wayne G
1 month ago

This is reminiscent of the demise of automotive magazines (and in general, all magazines) as the interwebbies took hold. Would have been caught up in the slaughter, except I saw it coming and got out. Maybe I was psychotic…er…psychic (possibly both) but did the same thing just before the 2008/2009 “great recession.” Had started a magazine/website that was just starting to take hold when I decided to kill it in 2007. My newsstand distributor tried to talk me out of it. Six months later, he wanted to know what I knew, that he didn’t.

This too is what’s going on everywhere in this “country.” VCs, Private Equities, the great catastrophe (stupidity—see the oxymoron—social-media) of the “digital age.” Yes, it’s greed but way more than that. Had never read Autoblog but was a reader of the other blog, from which a bunch of you came. Peruse it now and again for a good belly laugh. Have boxes of rocks which are more intelligent.

Cameron Showers
Cameron Showers
1 month ago

Truly an unfortunate day in auto journalism even if the writing may have been on the wall with various signs.

Renescent
Renescent
1 month ago

Signing out of Autoblog and Jalopnik for the last time, never to look back, was a bummer; good content comes at a cost that few are willing to pay for in media these days.

Wes Siler
Wes Siler
1 month ago

Hey Matt, we finally beat Autoblog!

This isn’t as satisfying as Ray made it sound.

Accordian
Accordian
1 month ago

End of an era, remember used to flip between this and another sportscars forum back in the day.

Argentine Utop
Argentine Utop
1 month ago

I never read Autoblog (only its Argentine counterpart, which I think spun off). And I saw Jalopnik become decrepit in a short time. Only Rob and Erin write interesting stuff, the rest is like a bunch of college interns that don’t even google.
It’s sad that greed can destroy good value so quickly.

Maxzillian
Maxzillian
1 month ago

I started out on Autoblog, but once it got to encumbered with ads and other changes that made the site shitty to read and navigate I jumped to Jalopnik. Then Jalopnik became encumbered with ads (slideshows, anyone?) and other changes that made the site shitty to read…

bmw325_num99
bmw325_num99
1 month ago
Reply to  Maxzillian

I do my best to not click those slideshows just out of spite

Stef Schrader
Stef Schrader
1 month ago
Reply to  bmw325_num99

Same, TBH! They were mandated from the herb as a cheap way to pump traffic numbers, so I’m not going to give them the traffic in hopes that the staff can get back to writing normal articles. (Not a damn chance that Spanfeller would let that happen, but I can hope, I guess.)

PhotonicCannon
PhotonicCannon
1 month ago

Jalopnik became a site that openly advocate against car ownership and shames anyone who isn’t the “right kind” of auto enthusiast. Maybe Autoblog will become some kind of AI generated news blog with outlinks and aggressive auto-play ads.

Ben
Ben
1 month ago

I really enjoyed AutoBlog back in the day when Dan Roth and Zack Bowman were doing the podcast. Very shortly after that they lost most of my favorite writers and made some egregious changes to the website layout (I don’t remember what, specifically, but I do remember it really pissed me off) that actually pushed me to quit visiting and move to Jalopnik, which eventually led me here. So I guess for me AutoBlog is only interesting as a historical part of my online car reading and has been effectively dead to me for years.

Still sad to see it though. I would much prefer to have a healthy media ecosystem rather than basically one site that is still doing any kind of good writing.

Vb9594
Vb9594
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

Dan was fantastic on the site and great with the podcast, too.

Stef Schrader
Stef Schrader
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

I remember the layoutpocalypse. A good front page can really make or break a website.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago

I’m not anywhere near this industry, so I have no idea how it works, but what value does a “zombie” site actually have?

Lets say Autoblog just becomes some aggregator. Sure, you get some traffic for a while as people think it still exists as a source of original content, but eventually that slows to a trickle right? So what is it doing for you? Why bother even owning it? Once the brand “dies”, it is dead. People stop going there, they move on.

Aaron
Aaron
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

It’s all about juicing the pages to cater to aggregators and search engines, driving traffic, getting valuable advertising impressions and, on occasion, getting a click on a sponsored link. Even if traffic slows down significantly, the cost of running a zombie site is low enough that (especially with an existing site with a lot of history, cache, and outside links), that even moderate traffic can yield revenue. For these media vampires private equity firms, it’s all about getting the best margins for a long enough period that you can sell the property to the next butcher owner for a healthy sum.

Stef Schrader
Stef Schrader
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

Wild assumption that vultures look at anything beyond the short term there.

Shooting Brake
Shooting Brake
1 month ago

Another unfortunate loss. If you wanted to know how well the cargo space on any newer car actually works the luggage tests on Autoblog the last 5ish years have been the best comparative source, recommend checking them out if you or your significant other (like mine) prefer to pack everything conceivable no matter how long the trip, haha.

Aaron
Aaron
1 month ago
Reply to  Shooting Brake

I usually use Edmunds for that kind of stuff, or KBB. It’s sad, though, that there’s only a few good options for high quality car journalism. Pretty much here, R&T/C&D, and a smattering of passionate YouTubers.

WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
1 month ago

What’s Jalopnik?

Der Foo
Der Foo
1 month ago

Exactly.

Andreas8088
Andreas8088
1 month ago

I remember that site. Pity when it was discontinued.

Ryan L
Ryan L
1 month ago

I suspect it will stick around with like 1 employee/editor/publisher and basically be an aggregator site with little original content. I think that’s kinda the Arena gameplan based on what I’ve seen at a couple other properties.

Johnny Anxiety
Johnny Anxiety
1 month ago

This sucks. I know this isn’t a new thing either but it still stings.

With all of this VC failure going on in media, it makes me wonder if we are eventually going to get back to a time where there’s only a few options like we had during the days of print? Where there were only a few video game, sports, etc magazines and people paid money for them as opposed to how the internet has been up until this point where sites were free. Maybe it’s just my experience since I pay for this place and others like Defector and Arstechnica. It would mean further contraction in terms of available jobs but maybe it can put some stability in the industry.

Trust Doesn't Rust
Trust Doesn't Rust
1 month ago

This is a bummer. Autoblog was and is my go-to for automotive news. I’ve been reading Autoblog for nearly 20 years. I’m really sad to see it go.

With the (assumed) demise of the Autoblog podcast, The Autopian needs to spin theirs back up so I have something to listen to on Saturday morning. C’mon, do it for ol’ Trust.

BenCars
BenCars
1 month ago

When I first started out in this industry, I had a list of websites I referred to regularly for automotive news. Autoblog and Jalopnik (and CarScoops for that matter) were the ones I visited the most because their coverage were unparalleled in quality compared to much of the dross that were floating online elsewhere.

RIP Autoblog.

Goffo Sprezzatura
Goffo Sprezzatura
1 month ago

I’ve almost never read Autoblog. Loosing interest in Jalopnik too…it’s like watching a loved one succumb to addiction.

Phuzz
Phuzz
1 month ago

You could probably buy Autoblog for less than the rent on a flat in London.

Lucas Zaffuto
Lucas Zaffuto
1 month ago

Autoblog is still part of my daily routine too. As a matter of fact I just got here from there, just now. They have been in decline for quite some time, but I still find useful stuff there every now and then. I use their compare cars utility all the time.

https://www.autoblog.com/cars-compare/

What are some other sites that are still relevant besides this one?

Industrial_design_guy
Industrial_design_guy
1 month ago

Used to read Autoblog daily, and then I gave it up mostly overnight after a site redesign. The gallery images went from big to small, and it lost its navigation style by creating sections rather than just being chronological. I remember being annoyed and frustrated with the design and it was bad enough to ditch altogether. The content also turned crap over the years.

CanyonCarver
CanyonCarver
1 month ago

Man bringing up the history. I used to read every single article that came up on AutoBlog and Jalopnik religiously throughout the day. Used to keep both pages open and just refreshed all the time.

I recently went over to AB for no particular reason (as I haven’t read anything from there in ages) and man was it a shell of its former self. Really hated to see it but doesn’t really surprise me either as I have kept up with what’s been going on with a lot of these sites.

Ppnw
Ppnw
1 month ago

I used to love Autoblog but they did this to themselves. The good content disappeared almost as fast as an onslaught of ads appeared.

Nowadays half of the articles are just press releases and the rest are “sponsored posts” trying to sell me the same old products on Amazon.

It used to be of value and it was enshitified like everything else. This be a warning for The Autopian which is awesome in every regard but has started to slip in the same “partner post” crap slowly but surely.

Papa Bruyant
Papa Bruyant
1 month ago
Reply to  Ppnw

I’d push back slightly on your “partner post” comment. I think Autopian has done a fine job delivering them in a way that fits the spirit of the site, much better than many other places. That said, membership is the key to keeping it that way…sign up, people!

Severson
Severson
1 month ago

Quite amusing as a original follower of both sites since 2004, i remember the original Autoblog and it was side by side in my favorites bar for years with Jalopnik.
Got to see it rise and fall, and the same with Jalopnik.

Utherjorge
Utherjorge
1 month ago

And nothing of value was lost.

Autoblog has been a disaster for so many years, so while there were some cool things noted, and blah blah blah, their inability to moderate comments is unforgivable. The Drive and Jalopnik are headed neck and neck over the same cliff.

BobWellington
BobWellington
1 month ago

Autoblog was the first online car site I visited (and visited frequently). I think at some point they mucked up the comment section or something rather and I defected to Jalopnik. I still go to Jalopnik because I get the daily email, though I’m not sure how much longer that will last…

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