Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Awl

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Available in
  
English

Editor
  
Silvia Killingsworth

Website
  
theawl.com

Created by
  
Choire Sicha Alex Balk

Revenue
  
Unknown

Type of site
  
Current events, culture

The Awl is a website about "news, ideas and obscure Internet minutiae of the day" based in New York City. Its motto is "Be Less Stupid."

Contents

History

Founded in April 2009 by David Cho and former Gawker editors Choire Sicha and Alex Balk out of Sicha's East Village apartment after being laid off by the pop culture magazine Radar, the trio decided to launch their own blog, completely "out of pocket with a bare-bones site." The site's name was coined by contributor Tom Scocca, after the small pointed tool used for piercing holes. "He’d always wanted to have a newspaper named The Awl. So we semi bought it from him in a friendly arrangement," Sicha told Vanity Fair.

The first posts on the site were an infographic by Emily Gould of Gawker’s office seating chart, "a video of a Miss USA contestant responding to a gay marriage question from Perez Hilton, and an item linking to a Reuters article about physicist Stephen Hawking being taken to the hospital." Initial expectations by media observers were for the site to be a carbon copy of Gawker, but, said Nieman Journalism Lab’s Justin Ellis, "instead it was something smaller and focused on the writing, where people can write about the stuff they’re passionate or super nerdy about".

Staff

As of July 2015, The Awl Network employs 13 people, as well as many freelance contributors. After editing the Awl for over almost two years, Matt Buchanan and John Herrman, announced their departure from the site in February 2016. In March 2016 it was announced that Silvia Killingsworth would take over the editing position. The Awl was published by John Shankman from 2011 until May 2014, when Michael Macher became publisher. In 2011, David Cho left the Awl to join ESPN-affiliated sports site Grantland.

Sister sites

The Awl has five sister sites: Splitsider, a comedy website; The Hairpin, a site geared toward women; The Wirecutter, a consumer electronics blog; The Sweethome, a home-furnishings review site; and The Billfold, a blog with a focus on personal finances; Laura Olin edits The Awl's newsletter entitled Everything Changes. Buchanan and Herrman also launched a podcast for the site. The site also launched an app on the Apple Store called The Awl: Weekend Companion.

References

The Awl Wikipedia