Home » Private Equity Is Killing Three More Important Car News Sites

Private Equity Is Killing Three More Important Car News Sites

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I’m doing a Gilmore Girls rewatch for my mental health, and last night I hit the episode with the writer Norman Mailer. In retrospect, it’s not the cameo that catches you off guard, but the insistence that one of the characters should be respected because his dad is a billionaire who made his money by owning regional newspapers. It’s the opposite of today when billionaires still own media companies, but only because they’re the only ones rich enough to risk the losses. The other option is private equity.

The private equity thing rarely works out well for media companies, and I’m sad to start this week’s first Morning Dump with news that three of the OG car news sites are going dark in approximately one week.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Also in one week, President Trump’s narrower “Liberation Day” tariff announcement is reportedly coming. What does that mean? Who is it for? No one knows for sure, including possibly the President himself, but it does seem to be a narrower set of moves than originally threatened/promised. Just the potential of all these tariffs is going to change the globe, and not necessarily in ways that are great for everyone.

And, finally, the United States is far from the only country playing games with trade, as China looks to build its next EV plant in a part of Europe that voted with it, not against it.

All Three High Gear Media Sites Go Dark Next Week

Gcr Screencap

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If you’re in media long enough you’ll live to see the publications you grew up with change dramatically or disappear. It’s always been the game. As a kid, Newsweek and Time magazine were two of the world’s most important news brands. They still exist, but both combined probably lack the influence of the eighth-biggest podcaster.

The economics of the media landscape have changed, which has sent the owners of many of these publications looking for an exit. Often, they find the door marked PRIVATE (EQUITY). I’m sure this works out for some publications, though I’m scratching my head to think of a shining example.

In the auto space, we’ve seen Hoonigan go bankrupt, the talent chased away at Donut Media, reorganizations at Cars & Bids, and the entire staff of Autoblog fired. All of these companies were entwined with PE. The latest victims are the original High Gear Media sites: Green Car ReportsMotor Authority, and The Car Connection.

All three of these sites date back to the early car Internet when blogs first came into the mainstream. I remember writing for Jalopnik back in 2008 and first encountering Green Car Reports and its longtime editor John Voelcker. The sites were a big part of the car news ecosystem at the time, growing big enough to be acquired by mega-conglomerate Internet Brands (WebMD, Cars Direct, et cetera) in 2014 for an undisclosed amount.

Here’s how the acquisition was described in a press release from 2014:

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“High Gear Media’s vertical automotive focus and commitment to producing high-quality content for in-market consumers complements and enhances our portfolio of leading online automotive brands,” said Bob Brisco, CEO of Internet Brands. “Consumers will continue to benefit from top-tier automotive content and buying advice, while auto OEMs and dealers will have access to exciting new advertising opportunities at unprecedented scale.

The key here is “in-market,” as it means “people who might buy cars.” The ability to sell to people in the purchase funnel is a key reason why certain car websites still exist. If you’re curious why Hearst, which already owns Car And Driver and Road & Track, bought Motor Trend, in-market is almost certainly a part of it. If you’re an average person and you search for info about a car online you’ll probably be sent to Car And Driver, which is largely just a massive buyer’s guide at this point. That’s intentional because that’s how Hearst makes a huge chunk of its earnings.

Reports show that none of the three departing sites lately have been able to muster much traffic (all three combined seem to do less traffic these days than The Autopian) as the staffs have shrunk over the years. It’s hard to imagine how to make a business out of a readership that low. Even if it was maybe inevitable, it still feels awful.

Joel Feder, a longtime and much-liked colleague, said on Friday that April 1st would be the end of posting to all three of those sites:

All good things come to an end. On April 1 this chapter will come to a close.

The Car Connection, Motor Authority, and Green Car Reports are being shut down. I have poured my heart and soul into this job and team for 15 years and could not be more proud of what we accomplished and stood for. Will forever be grateful to Marty Padgett for his unwavering support throughout the entire journey. Thank you to the rest of the team both past and present.

Journalists and PR folks from across the car web have reached out to give their support and express shock over the decision:

Kathy Graham Linked In Screenshot
Screenshot: LinkedIn

It’s here that I’ll mention the completely unsurprising detail, which is that Internet Brands is owned by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (better known as KKR). This is a massive US-based private equity firm that owns everything from a South Korean beer company to Simon & Shuster publishing.

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Internet Brands itself encompasses a huge swath of the online information space, and its other automotive holdings including CorvetteForum, RENNlist, and Cars Direct. It’s not clear if any of the forums (including Dodge Forum, MBWorld, and Club Lexus) the company owns will be impacted, but early indications are they aren’t involved in this round of closings.

I reached out to a spokesperson for Internet Brands with a list of questions. In addition to knowing if any forums will be closed, I’m curious if they’re going to maintain all the many years of reporting these sites did. In particular, Green Car Reports provided a lot of important coverage of Dieselgate and it would be a tragedy to see it all erased. [Ed Note: I’ll also emphasize just how much great stuff came from these sites, which acted as the launching pad for a number of talented journalists who are still crushin’ it today. -DT]. 

I’ll update the post if I hear back from them.

Media is hard. If you like this place and want it to continue to exist, please consider becoming a member.

President Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ Is Coming

Deposit Photos Trump
Source: Depositphotos.com

Because this is the second term for President Trump it’s clear to everyone that he loves using tariffs as a way to balance what he sees as unequal treatment of American products abroad and that you can’t really know from day-to-day which of his musings will come to fruition.

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The threat of tariffs on autos sent automakers scrambling for assistance, only to see the ones against Canada and Mexico quickly reversed. Suppliers are freaking out. Even the new metal tariffs (not to be confused with the NüMetal tariffs, which mostly impact Korn commodities) are starting to cause trouble for automakers.

There’s maybe a bit more clarity on this, now that President Trump’s aides are saying a ‘Liberation Day’ is coming on April 2nd. Cleary this date was chosen so that it doesn’t compete with the third anniversary of this site’s founding on March 32nd.

From Bloomberg:

President Donald Trump’s coming wave of tariffs is poised to be more targeted than the barrage he has occasionally threatened, aides and allies say, a potential relief for markets gripped by anxiety about an all-out tariff war.

Trump is preparing a “Liberation Day” tariff announcement on April 2, unveiling so-called reciprocal tariffs he sees as retribution for tariffs and other barriers from other countries, including longtime US allies. While the announcement would remain a very significant expansion of US tariffs, it’s shaping up as more focused than the sprawling, fully global effort Trump has otherwise mused about, officials familiar with the matter say.

The overall goal here, other than punishing other companies for putting tariffs on the United States, is to try to encourage trillions of dollars in investment in the country. This is a major shift from the historical neo-liberal trade policy embraced by both major parties, but especially by the Republican Party. The actual impacts of these policies are unclear because, at the moment, it’s not obvious who or what is going to be hit with import duties.

The New ‘China Shock’

BYD Cargo Ship
Photo: BYD

I talk about China Shock a lot, which is the modern name for the period in U.S. history when an influx of cheap Chinese goods led to lower prices for consumers at the expense of a lot of jobs, especially in the Industrial Midwest.

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These new tariffs could lead to a new one, just not here. Bloomberg Businessweek called the indirect impact of America’s new trade policy a “New China Shock” in last week’s The Big Take feature:

“This is China Shock 2.0 or China Shock 3.0,” says Gordon Hanson, a professor of urban policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and one of the authors of the research paper that coined the name of the phenomenon. “China has this immense manufacturing capacity, and the goods have to go somewhere.” The lesson from the US experience, he added, is that “there’s a political response to all this. People get mad.”

The hollowing out of local economies in the American heartland helped lead to the rise of Donald Trump as a political force. Seeking to rebalance US-China trade and bring manufacturing jobs home, Trump imposed tariffs on China during his first term that were kept in place by the Biden administration. Chinese manufacturers priced out of the US had to search for alternative markets, while some moved production to other countries to evade duties.

Countries that are targeted include Mexico, Vietnam, India, Turkey, and other emerging markets. It makes sense. If the United States becomes a harder market to access, China’s huge production capacity has to go somewhere.

China’s Newest EV Factory Is Reportedly Coming To Spain

Carlostavaresstellantisceo
Everyone’s favorite SNL comedian standing in front of a Leapmotor B10. Photo: Stellantis

Speaking of…

Last year I wrote that the “Chinese Government Is Reportedly Using Stellantis To Punish Europe” and, yeah, that’s a decent headline. I think a more accurate headline could have been “… Is Using Stellantis To Punish Parts Of Europe.”

Here’s what I had at the time:

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Chinese automakers desperately want to sell cars outside of China and, specifically, they want to sell cars in Europe. For various reasons, ranging from the protection of local industry to the discomfort with China’s excessive subsidies/questionable labor practices, the European Union went through with its threat to add massive tariffs to many Chinese automakers trying to sell in Europe.

This wasn’t a unanimous vote, with Germany and Hungary opposing the measure and many more countries simply abstaining. I’ve talked about this before, but Europe has an uneasy relationship with China that depends a lot on the import-export relationship between individual EU member states. Ultimately, it was populous France, Italy, and Poland whose support pushed the tariffs forward, and it’s those countries that are now at risk of reprisal from China.

Stellantis has so many brands it’s hard to keep track of them all, but the newest one is a Chinese firm called Leapmotor that Stellantis became the majority shareholder of recently. Leapmotor already invested in Poland, using a plant there to produce the cheap T03 electric car. It was expected that Leapmotor would build the B10, pictured above, in Poland as well.

Since the vote, those plans have shifted, and now it’s probably Spain that’s getting the plant according to sources who spoke with Reuters:

China’s embassy in Spain said Stellantis and its Chinese partner Leapmotor plan a $200 million investment in a Spanish factory after a person with direct knowledge of the matter said Spain was the top site to produce the B10 electric crossover for the European market from 2026.

The two companies have been looking for a site in Europe to produce the model which made its debut on the continent in September. Stellantis’ factories in Germany and Slovakia have also been under consideration, Reuters previously reported.

China’s embassy said the factory where they plan to invest is in Zaragoza, northeast Spain, but did not provide any further details.

Everything is politics.

What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

I’m going to do a musical theme week, and that theme will be Laura Nyro. My argument is that the artist Laura Nyro is the most influential artist of the 20th century that you’ve never heard of, and everyone from Elton John to Ben Folds owes a ton to Nyro. You’ve heard her songs because she’s written for everyone, even if you’ve never heard her amazing voice.

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The song I’m guessing most of you know is “Eli’s Coming” by Three Dog Night. It’s a Nyro song through and through, including the massive tempo shifts, the furious piano part that’s like a haunted ragtime, and the just sheer intensity of it all. People love this song and most have no idea it was Nyro who wrote it.

The Big Question

What were the first automotive publications you remember reading?

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Fleet Wheeled Mercury
Fleet Wheeled Mercury
9 hours ago

I picked up various magazines as a teenager, nothing really stuck because a magazine subscription was too dear. As I got older, I was mostly at Jalop until this came along. I was picking up the Ol Skool Rodz and Car Kulture Delux magazines when I saw them, but they closed up shop last year.

TXJeepGuy
TXJeepGuy
13 hours ago

I really hate that forums are owned by companies like this. Seems like there is no business model there, so why did they get into it?

Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
5 hours ago
Reply to  TXJeepGuy

Ads. Ads. Also, ads.

Forum users are a highly targeted captive population. I expect conversion on ads on specialty forums to be inordinately high.

Joseph Springer
Joseph Springer
19 hours ago

Some of the car news sites are so about the environment that all they seem to cover is good gas mileage and positively cover new regulations for safety and emissions. While that may be great in California, in the rest of the country we like smiles per gallon and cuss new government regulations daily. Much of car world resides in more free states that are not interested in many of these topics. For us there is no point to you sites/magazines that preach at us. We find sites that help us create custom cars by getting around regulations and technical help.
This is just my opinion from the free state of Kentucky.

Dinklesmith
Dinklesmith
19 hours ago

Why be so angry all the time?

GK450
GK450
18 hours ago

Believe it or not, government regulation on safety and emissions is relatively lax. Sites report on cars with good gas mileage because, shocker, people don’t like paying for gas. As for safety, NHTSA doesn’t even mandate side airbags on new cars. Again, sites write about safety because consumers care about it. This is quite literally free market capitalism at work – journalists are reporting on what the market wants.

Ppnw
Ppnw
4 hours ago

California arguably having the biggest and best car scene in the country doesn’t really support this.

Aaron Mitchell
Aaron Mitchell
21 hours ago

Hopefully someone somewhere is archiving these treasure troves…

Pimento
Pimento
1 day ago

I never got into any mags going up, but the first car website I pored though was Autoblog (it’s a dot com). It’s still going, quietly just being the website of a guy who likes cars. It’s a really pleasent reminder of the old internet.

Geekycop .
Geekycop .
1 day ago

Kit car illustrated, hemmings motor news, dupont registry, and of course every ’80s kid learning to drive pre-fast and the furious favorite catalog of random car crap. . . Jc whitney.

Elrond Hubbard
Elrond Hubbard
1 day ago

I remember reading my dad’s C&D back when I was in HS. I was also a huge Rush fan. So when C&D had a speculative cover story about a Barchetta car, and the car on the cover was red, I almost had an aneurysm. One day I too could own my Red Barchetta and blast that song 24/7 while driving around!

Roofless
Roofless
1 day ago

> “High Gear Media’s vertical automotive focus and commitment to producing high-quality content for in-market consumers complements and enhances our portfolio of leading online automotive brands,” said Bob Brisco, CEO of Internet Brands. “Consumers will continue to benefit from top-tier automotive content and buying advice, while auto OEMs and dealers will have access to exciting new advertising opportunities at unprecedented scale.

I refuse to believe a human said those words out loud, or that whatever said those words is in any way human.

Fleet Wheeled Mercury
Fleet Wheeled Mercury
9 hours ago
Reply to  Roofless

I’ve been job hunting recently and I see so much of this corpo-speak its maddening. Is there a course in MBA programs where you learn to just make up the most verbose, roundabout ways of describing things imaginable?

RhoadBlock
RhoadBlock
1 day ago

TBQ: As a kid I’d go hang out in the magazine aisle while my mom was shopping at the grocery store or Walmart and read thru C/D, R/T, Super Street, and Truckin’ magazines. I’d buy them off the shelf when I started working. And even at like 12 y/o I’d peruse thru the local auto listings even tho I was never in the market to buy a car lol. – edit: Sport Compact Car too!

Private equity ruined my Car & Driver subscription. In high school (early 00’s) my school had a magazine drive so my Pop bought a 1-year subscription to C/D and R/T. Never renewed either subscription. But C/D never stopped coming. For like 20+ years it’s been going. He still gets them. I got married & moved out back in 2013, but we used to work at the same company together so he’d bring each month’s new issue to the office & drop it on my desk after he read it. But our bosses retired after 40 years and sold the business to PE. I lasted less than 2 years before I quit. So now I don’t get my free monthly C/D subscription dropped on my desk anymore. (And yes C/D in physical print is vastly superior to the website.)

Semi related: PE is ruining every industry across the country – not just news/media. They’re decimating trade service companies right now and royally screwing over customers. The A/C company my Pop & I worked for spent 40 years building up a great reputation. Pop had been there 27 years and I 14 years when the owners sold the business to PE. They’ve become an absolute dumpster fire in under 3 years. Pop’s sticking it out cause he’s close to retirement but I didn’t last 2 years before quitting after PE took over. @Autopians – please get quotes from local small businesses that haven’t gone PE before signing any contracts, ESPECIALLY if they’re pushing you to replace vs repair!!!

Last edited 1 day ago by RhoadBlock
Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
1 day ago

(not to be confused with the NüMetal tariffs, which mostly impact KoЯn commodities) 

Fixed it for you.

Also, you asked, “What were the first automotive publications you remember reading?

Car Craft and Super Chevy Magazines. I had print subscriptions to both for years. I attended the Car Craft Summernationals in St. Paul, MN for quite a few years. I also went to Super Chevy shows in Martin, MI, Tucson, AZ, Phoenix, AZ, and Las Vegas, NV.

Widgetsltd
Widgetsltd
1 day ago

Beginning around 1980 when I was just a lad, I had these subscriptions: Hot Rod, Road & Track, Autoweek, Car and Driver, Automobile, Grassroots Motorsports, (Porsche) Panorama. I had some of these subscriptions concurrently. The only print magazine subscription that I still have is Grassroots Motorsports (also known as GRM).

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 day ago

Sorry Matt I have spent almost 30 years in various Circulation Director roles in newspapers all art he country. Editorial people have convinced themselves they need to convince the American People to believe the delusional far left democrat beliefs. We clearly saw media not even trying to hide their bias to get Harris elected. In the old days local media could censor truth and push their agenda. Now intelligent people can scan the internet for the truth. Jalopnik became a joke in the car world.vim surprised it still exists. The media must realize they can’t mislead intelligent people and go back to reporting facts and kill activist journalism. Otherwise why does journalism have a 25% approval among readers? Activist journalism is why no newspaper is profitable they felt they were supposed to tell readers how to feel instead of reporting facts. 30 years buddy back to the age when newspapers were profitable I saw it all

Willard
Willard
1 day ago

What the hell are you even talking about?

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 day ago
Reply to  Willard

Journalism vs activist journalism

lastwraith
lastwraith
1 day ago

Yes, activist journalism is clearly the #1 reason why “no newspaper is profitable”. That tracks along with the other rubbish you are spewing.
Next you’ll tell us that radical lefties are responsible for the downfall of Barnes & Noble too.

Considering what we’re living through here in the states right now, I’m more inclined to believe that most people just can’t read and that’s the primary reason for half the crap happening.

Last edited 1 day ago by lastwraith
TDI in PNW
TDI in PNW
23 hours ago

Read the room and crawl back under that rock you’ve been hiding under for 30 years. Yes, you clearly “saw it all” through your right wing blinders.

Schrödinger's Catbox
Schrödinger's Catbox
17 hours ago

A circulation director who can’t write a proper sentence. This comment and the writer both carry the whiff of the bucolic end pile of the common male bovine.

Last edited 17 hours ago by Schrödinger's Catbox
Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
5 hours ago

In fairness a circ director is on the sales side and not allowed into the newsroom. In principle.

AnscoflexII
AnscoflexII
1 day ago

I used to subscribe to Road & Track, but read the other mainstream American magazines pretty frequently, as well as Hot Rod. Sometime in the late eighties I discovered British magazines at the bookstore and started reading a bunch of them, including CAR, Autosport, and Performance Car (then home to Jeremy Clarkson).

These days the only one I still subscribe to (and that’s only the digital version, I don’t get paper copies anymore) is Classic and Sports Car, which I’ve been reading since 1988. I have rather less interest in new cars these days, at least not enough to subscribe to magazines about them.

Richard Anderson
Richard Anderson
1 day ago

First auto magazine was C&D, then Motor Trend, Automobile, Auto Week, Car, Truck Trend when they spun that out of Motor Trend, Motor Trend Classic (I think I still have issue #1) and a bunch of other ones that I can’t remember. I stopped subscribing to C&D after they stopped sending issues out, I got two issues out of my last year’s subscription and at that point the magazine had gone to shit anyways.

Baltimore Paul
Baltimore Paul
1 day ago

Roan & Track. Porsche had just introduced a 911 with AWD. I am a fan of both. I subscribed for years after. From middle school past college.

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
1 day ago

There used to be comic books for car enthusiasts. I’m not talking about CAR-Toons type stuff. Actual comic books about boys and the cars they loved. “Wow Todd, it’s a shame your Dad made you detune your 409 after you got a ticket.” Then, Car and Driver, Motor Trend, Autoweek, Cycle World, Automobile.
Great call on Laura Nyro, btw.

Do You Have a Moment To Talk About Renaults?
Do You Have a Moment To Talk About Renaults?
1 day ago

My first automotive publications have the exact same words in their names: French magazine Sport Auto and domestic newspaper Auto Sport.

Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
5 hours ago

My favorite magazine growing up was the annual “all the cars on the market this year” copy of Automobile Magazine and Auto Journal. I still have some of those specs memorized.

Holy crap, it still exists!

https://www.automobile-magazine.fr/toute-l-actualite/article/38472-le-plus-gros-hors-serie-de-lautomobile-magazine-sort-en-kiosques-aujourdhui

Last edited 5 hours ago by Harvey Park Bench
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