LifeZette

LifeZette

LifeZette

American conservative website


LifeZette is a conservative American website founded in 2015 by conservative political commentator Laura Ingraham and businessman Peter Anthony.[2] In January 2018, Ingraham confirmed that she had sold the majority stake in LifeZette to The Katz Group, owned by Canadian billionaire Daryl Katz.[3]

Quick Facts Type of site, Available in ...

LifeZette is based in Washington, D.C.[4] As of 2015, Maureen Mackey was its managing editor and Peter Anthony was its chief executive officer.[5] As was the case with several online-only opinion and commentary outlets, the site received criticism for promoting the Vincent Foster and Seth Rich conspiracy theories in the run-up to the 2016 United States presidential election.[6][7]

History

Peter Anthony registered LifeZette.com in October 2014. He developed the site with Ingraham and they launched LifeZette in July 2015.[8]

The site first hired outgoing Daily Caller reporter Neil Munro to be its political editor, but Munro withdrew before the site's launch. Quin Hillyer was enlisted to be its political editor, before he was replaced by Keith Koffler in August 2015. Koffler left the site in May 2016 to work at the Washington Examiner.[9]

LifeZette was the first organization called on by Sean Spicer during the initial White House press conference in January 2017.[2] Later, Ingraham was announced as the host of Fox News weeknight program The Ingraham Angle.[10]

In January 2019, LifeZette laid off six staffers.[11]

Promotion of conspiracy theories

Two weeks before the 2016 presidential election, the website posted a video about voting machines possibly being compromised because of links to a company tied to liberal billionaire George Soros.[12]

LifeZette also published a video titled "Clinton Body Count", which promoted conspiracy theories regarding Bill and Hillary Clinton.[13] LifeZette removed the video and later released a statement saying that "[t]he video was made in jest, and merely noted that the theories existed," comparing them to viral videos made by "left-leaning digital outlets like BuzzFeed."[14]


References

  1. "Contact Us". LifeZette.
  2. Gold, Hadas (2018-01-30). "Canadian billionaire's company buys Laura Ingraham's site LifeZette". CNNMoney. Retrieved 2018-12-13.
  3. "Laura Ingraham To Launch LifeZette | Cision". Cision. 2015-04-06. Retrieved 2016-05-14.
  4. "Laura Ingraham's new site: LifeZette.com". POLITICO. Retrieved 2016-05-14.
  5. "Laura Ingraham's Site LifeZette Loses Another Editor". www.mediaite.com. Retrieved 2016-05-14.
  6. Victor, Daniel (18 September 2017). "Laura Ingraham Will Host 10 O'Clock Show as Part of Fox News Shuffle". The New York Times.
  7. Palmer, Anna; Sherman, Jake; Lippman, Daniel; Okun, Eli; Ross, Garrett. "Playbook PM". POLITICO. Retrieved 2019-01-11.

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