March Climber
Gold Member
Edit: Guys, this is about the business side of things, not the personality side.
Definitely worth listening to when anyone here gets the chance. It's his very first topic of his video titled "Let's talk about it".
He considered the site of Giantbomb a failure the minute they switched their parent company back to the one that owned Gamespot, which is CBS.
It only got worse and worse behind the scenes from that point, as they were dealing with the constant shuffling of seats higher up at CBS which led to infighting, lack of funding, them attempting to change Gamespot to be as Giantbomb-like as possible (so that they could eventually remove them), and finally them asking 'why do we pay two websites that do the same thing' once Gamespot had become more proficient at everything Giantbomb had innovated in (like video-first content and personality-based content).
He says it felt equivalent to an indie wrestling company (ECW, TNA, etc.) branching away from WWE and forming a separate company because 'fuck that company and their policies' only to sadly get absorbed by WWE again and slowly get gutted.
Edit 2:
Starts at 7:30
Around 29 minutes in Nextlander repeats the same talking points above from Jeff's side: CBS issues and the move to CBS being a bad idea, along with CBS absorbing giantbomb for their personality-based content as they saw it as the futuristic way of doing things back then (and they were right), and using that purchase as a way to help Gamespot mend (post-GB exodus) back to a good spot and grow as a company, which some would see as them attempting to eventually replace GB with Gamespot.
According to Nextlander, they were slowly sinking based on money allocation and production costs (as CBS was siphoning money on their side and utilizing GB's marketing budget on things that weren't GB-related), and Alex was the first one to shoot the 'resignation' shot, which made Brad and Vinny follow suit even though Vinny still saw hope and tried to negotiate with CBS. They left and tried to convince Jeff also, but he stayed at GB for a bit longer due to having a kid (amongst other reasons).
Definitely worth listening to when anyone here gets the chance. It's his very first topic of his video titled "Let's talk about it".
He considered the site of Giantbomb a failure the minute they switched their parent company back to the one that owned Gamespot, which is CBS.
It only got worse and worse behind the scenes from that point, as they were dealing with the constant shuffling of seats higher up at CBS which led to infighting, lack of funding, them attempting to change Gamespot to be as Giantbomb-like as possible (so that they could eventually remove them), and finally them asking 'why do we pay two websites that do the same thing' once Gamespot had become more proficient at everything Giantbomb had innovated in (like video-first content and personality-based content).
He says it felt equivalent to an indie wrestling company (ECW, TNA, etc.) branching away from WWE and forming a separate company because 'fuck that company and their policies' only to sadly get absorbed by WWE again and slowly get gutted.
Edit 2:
Took me a while to find the video. Someone else uploaded it to youtube so I'm not sure how long it will stay up:Nextlander latest podcast goes deep an hour long on what happened when they were there.
Starts at 7:30
Around 29 minutes in Nextlander repeats the same talking points above from Jeff's side: CBS issues and the move to CBS being a bad idea, along with CBS absorbing giantbomb for their personality-based content as they saw it as the futuristic way of doing things back then (and they were right), and using that purchase as a way to help Gamespot mend (post-GB exodus) back to a good spot and grow as a company, which some would see as them attempting to eventually replace GB with Gamespot.
According to Nextlander, they were slowly sinking based on money allocation and production costs (as CBS was siphoning money on their side and utilizing GB's marketing budget on things that weren't GB-related), and Alex was the first one to shoot the 'resignation' shot, which made Brad and Vinny follow suit even though Vinny still saw hope and tried to negotiate with CBS. They left and tried to convince Jeff also, but he stayed at GB for a bit longer due to having a kid (amongst other reasons).
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