Jeff Bezos bezeichnete die Washington Post als seine schlimmste Investition mit „schrecklichen“ Leuten, bevor er über 300 entließ – „Sie hören nicht zu. Meine anderen Unternehmen hören zu.“

    https://gizmodo.com/jeff-bezos-called-washington-post-his-worst-investment-and-staff-he-laid-off-terrible-people-2000773533

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    1. Excerpts from article by Justin Caffier:

      *[…] At a December 2024 dinner with President Trump, just two months before laying off over 300 people at the paper, Bezos was heard complaining about Post staffers, reports the California Post after reviewing an excerpt ahead of [Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman’s] June 23 release date.*

      *“The people there are terrible,” Bezos griped to Trump. “They don’t listen. My other companies, they listen.”*

      *Bezos’ failure to shape the newsroom in his worldview wasn’t for lack of trying. In the weeks leading up to the November 2024 election, he personally intervened to squash the paper’s already-written endorsement of Kamala Harris.*

      *And as he posted on X in February 2025, weeks after slashing staff, the paper’s new insubordination-free opinion page would be “writing every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets.”*

      *The damage had already been done, however. After seeing the nearly 150-year-old media institution reduced to a rag in the ill-equipped hands of a would-be Hearst, it’s no surprise Post subscribers abandoned ship in droves.*

      *Though Bezos points to the Post’s $100 million in losses in 2024 as the impetus for the downsizing, Swan and Haberman’s recording of that dinner with Trump hint at a more complicated, emotional reason.*

      *“In Trump’s telling, Bezos told him he had lost half his friends over the investment,” the authors told the California Post.*

    2. PatchyWhiskers on

      „Why do these journalists report the news, not the things I tell them? Are they stupid?“

    3. Historical-Finish564 on

      Yeah. They’re not supposed to listen to you. They’re supposed to follow the news and reported faithfully. They used to do that before you bought the paper

    4. Interesting-Prize-79 on

      Oligarch fires people disloyal to the fascist regime and to him

    5. thissomeotherplace on

      Jeff Bezos is a weak newspaper owner who doesn’t understand news

    6. capnwally14 on

      This quote (even if you infer the context given Bezos‘ other statements about the Post) is a political rorschach test

    7. It’s the Republican playbook. He didn’t buy the journal to make it successful. He’s complaining about it and he’s gutting it. The goal is to silence them and neutralize them.

    8. Chaotic-Entropy on

      „I told you to lie, why aren’t you lying? You people are worthless.“

    9. It’s interesting to see how once these tech ceos rise to power, they all want some form of autocracy, and throw democracy out the window. Bezos, Zuck, Musk. All of them stronghand and control and censor. I guess democracy really is the enemy of the rich

    10. reverendsteveii on

      were the robber barons from the last 20s this blatant and incompetent about it? we imagine Hearst and Pulitzer as playing 6-d chess against one another and shaping US policy like Ozymandias but I feel like had we been there it would have just been the same open, blatant bias and people being downright proud that they’re being prevented from reading anything that might challenge their pre-existing beliefs at all. I seem to recall Dan Carlin quoting one of them about WWI as flat-out saying „How do you like my war?“

    11. Powerful_Resident_48 on

      Shocker. An entire industry that is built around the core belief of questioning everything isn’t listening tot heir tech bro overlord.

    12. SubstantialSeesaw374 on

      “I did a hostile takeover and the employees are so hostile!”

      (Yes I know it wasn’t literally a hostile takeover from the perspective of the previous owners.)

    13. I was a subscriber to the Washington Post before and during Bezos‘ ownership. When he bought the paper and invested in it, it was wonderful. They had incredibly talented writers, the site had so many different types of storytelling, and the design…to this day is one of my favorites.

      But I canceled when Bezos didn’t allow the paper to endorse a candidate. It wasn’t this move that made me cancel. It was because I’d question every article from that point on. It’s like having someone cheat on you…yes the one time cheating is bad, but the bigger bad is the lack of trust going forward. Newspapers are built on that.

      Bezos had something special in the Washington Post and he absolutely destroyed it. Now the paper cannot succeed because he pissed off the very people who subscribed to it.

      Anyway…eat the rich.

    14. „I’m trying to control the narrative. Is that too much to ask? I mean, others are doing it. Why can’t I?“

    15. resilient_antagonist on

      He got outsmarted by Elon Musk who invested into Twitter. Thinking that educated journalists would suddenly pivot towards generating political propaganda, gives a glimpse of the kind of bubble he lives in. Elon Musk on the other hand now owns a private opinion-machine with content created by his disciples, who willingly spread his word.

    16. downtownfreddybrown on

      The people he fired should open an independent news paper and call it Post Washington

    17. IwasDeadinstead on

      He wants WaPo to be like The New York Times. A complete propaganda operation.

    18. iaNCURdehunedoara on

      Just so it becomes clear to everyone: every news media owner is like this. They demand from their companies to lie and push any kind of narrative that’s beneficial for them.

    19. True_Window_9389 on

      This isn’t even true. I was a subscriber for almost 20 years and followed even the internal drama of the paper in that time, especially when it was put up for sale and bought by Bezos.

      The reporting about his ownership from when he bought it until he killed the Harris endorsement was that he was an absentee owner. As the paper was financially struggling, management and reporters were *begging* him to do something to boost the reach and financial viability of the business. He showed up a few days after he bought it with a rahrah speech, and then abandoned it. They *wanted* his involvement after that and got nothing.

      To an extent, reporters and readers appreciated that, since it let the good journalists do their job unencumbered. He at least wasn’t meddling in that time, and their reporting in the first Trump admin showed it. But it meant there was no strategy or vision on transforming the paper to compete in the digital era, especially with social media and video taking center stage. Even considering that, institutions like WaPo, NYT and WSJ were the *sources* for news that all the pundits and Tiktokers based their nonsense on. And yet, leadership couldn’t leverage it.

      The shift for Bezos only came after the election when he was trying to cozy back up to Trump. As much as he wants to make it an issue of insubordination, it was because journalists were trying to protect basic journalistic integrity against a now-meddlesome and agenda-driven owner who cared more about investments and government contracts.

    20. baabaabaabeast on

      Democracy Dies in Darkness is their motto yet Bezos continues to dim the lights

    21. NearlyAtTheEnd on

      It’s supposed to be an unbiased news agency. Not listen to a hoarder.

    22. danielrobertcampbell on

      It’s ALMOST like he doesn’t understand what real journalism is supposed to be. It’s not propaganda, it’s reporting facts and asking tough questions of those in power. It’s not your personal mouthpiece. Billionaires are idiots.

    23. LindeeHilltop on

      The Great & Powerful ~~Wizard of Oz~~ Sociopath has spoken: “Pay ~~no~~ attention to the man behind the curtain!”

    24. unaskthequestion on

      Because Bezos knows so much about the newspaper industry? The myth that billionaires must be smarter than everyone else definitely exists in their own minds too.

    25. Hour_Flatworm3616 on

      „I won’t be leading The Washington Post day-to-day. I am happily living in ‚the other Washington‘ where I have a day job that I love. Besides that, The Post already has an excellent leadership team that knows much more about the news business than I do…“

      — Bezos 13 years ago

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