Sources inside Glenn Beck’s
once-mighty multimedia production company say that Beck is falling apart as his
media empire collapses around him.
An employee of Beck’s flagship
website TheBlaze.com told Huffington Post in an article published Wednesday
that the few remaining staff are “looking for an exit” because they expect the
site to be shuttered soon for good.
Huffington Post’s Michelle
Fields said that TheBlaze.com is “suffering from a lack of editorial direction,
staff attrition and internal discord” and that the mood among employees is
“somber” as they’ve watched a 25-member editorial team
get whittled down to six people — with more cuts expected.
“The few people who are still
left are looking for an exit because they know The Blaze is over,” the source
told Fields. “They haven’t told us straight up that they’re done with us, but
all the signs point to it, and they’re not replacing people who are laid off or
get out.”
Other employees report that
their healthcare benefits were reduced over the summer and that in September,
all of their travel and phone stipends were cut off. In June, the company
closed its vast New York City newsroom and the remaining employees are working
from home.
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TheBlaze.com was founded in 2010 as an
offshoot of Beck’s then-thriving radio, television and book publishing
businesses. Beck was riding high as a popular Fox News show host and
bestselling author.
The website aimed to be a
conservative alternative to Huffington Post and initially traffic was strong,
the envy of other right-leaning websites like Breitbart.com and the Daily
Caller. However, a series of poor management decisions coupled with Beck’s
increasingly “erratic,” “paranoid” and “reckless” handling of his businesses
have led to a mounting crisis.
The staff, said Fields, largely
blame upper management for the site’s problems.
“There have been four CEOs since
2010, and two of them left in a span of six months in 2015. Beck is
currently embroiled in a lawsuit with one of those former CEOs, whom he has
accused of fraud and mismanagement,” she said.
“We had everything when we
started in 2010 — a huge platform and following — but management screwed it up
with their incompetence,” one staffer said. “They made so many stupid mistakes,
and Glenn trusts the wrong people, who then go and hire other bad people.”
Management, however, insist
that they have the situation well in hand and are planning a relaunch of the
website called “Project Phoenix, Blaze 2.0” which will be under the editorial
direction of former RedState.com Editor-in-Chief Leon Wolf.
Sources told Fields that they
are skeptical. Managers began to talk of “Project Phoenix” more than a year
ago, they said, and if a relaunch does happen, they suspect that the site will
move away from news coverage.
“When The Blaze launched, Glenn
said that it would be a place for reported pieces and news, but the ‘Blaze 2.0’
relaunch will be sponsored content, community-generated content, and links to
videos from Glenn Beck’s Blaze TV shows,” a source said. “The Blaze as we know
it is dead.”
Beck is embroiled in an
acrimonious lawsuit with former business partner and protege Christopher Balfe,
who says that Beck is erratic and emotionally unstable and that the former Fox
News host has driven The Blaze, LLC and its parent company Mercury Arts into
the ground. Balfe blames Beck’s reckless spending and fecklessness about the
overall direction for his empire, which he has alternately envisioned as a
media company, a theme park, a movie studio and a chain of hospitals.
“Beck
insisted his work with news be quashed, sometimes refusing to participate in a
show entirely if it contained a news segment,” alleges one of Balfe’s lawsuits
against his former mentor. “He spent Mercury’s money developing films, planning
amusement parks, and planning to reinvent the healthcare industry starting by
building his own hospitals. In the summer of 2013, Beck even produced a live
stage show called ‘Man in the Moon’ that cost over $2 million for a single
night run.”
By
2014, the sprawling and over-leveraged company was defaulting on vendor
payments and falling into chaos as Beck spent more and more money on a private
jetliner, an armored Maybach limousine and “unnecessary private security.”
“As
Beck’s paranoia increased, so did his spending,” the suit alleges. “The company
was spending excessive amounts to pay for unnecessary private security Beck
required, and Beck insisted on leasing unnecessary office space as well as
building and rebuilding himself unnecessary offices and sets. Despite Balfe’s
best efforts, Mercury soon fell behind on vendor payments.”
Beck fired Balfe in early 2015
when the two could not come to an agreement on how to save the company. The
abrupt termination ended a 17-year business relationship and friendship, say Balfe’s
lawyers, who are seeking $3 million in unpaid compensation.
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