Book Review: "Conspiracy" Tells Hulk Hogan & Peter Thiel's Side of the Gawker Story...and That's It

Full disclosure: While I write for Deadspin, a former Gawker Media Group website, I did not start there until after the former Gawker Media sites were sold to Univision and rebranded as Gizmodo Media Group.

In June, it was reported by that author/PR specialist/sometimes media columnist Ryan HolšŸŒƒiday was writing a book about billionaire Peter Thielā€™s plan to destroy Gawker, which succeeded via funding Hulk Hoganā€™s lawsuit against the independent blog empire. At the time, I wasnā€™t sure what to think of it, and not just because Holidayā€™s columns about Gawker were a bit excessively one-sided. The TechCrunch article read like a press release and claimed that Holidayā€™s advance was rumored to be a hefty $400,000, whichšŸ¦© felt more like Holiday bragging via proxy (regardless of whether or the reported payout was real). However, the article did indicate that Holiday had an on the record interview with not just Gawker founder/former owner Nick Denton, but also Thiel, whoā€™s notoriously tight-lipped. Even if it ended up being a bit of a hagiography, it would have value as Thielā€™s version of what happened.

Private Party Didnā€™t Know Salary Contracts Were A Thing, Were Getting $1000 Per Match On Tiered AEW Deals

Well, the book is out today, February 27, 2018, and it does focus on Thielā€™s accounting of what happened. The intermediary who hooked Thiel up with lawyer Charles Harder, identified as Mr. A (and to be Australian businessman Aron Dā€™Souza) also spoke to Holiday, as did Harder himself and even Hogan. The book absolutely does have value in outlining exactly how the plan came together, ź§ƒbut it tries to be more, and thatā€™s where the seams start to come apart.

In the source notes, Holiday laments that other than Denton and former editor A.J. Daulerio, who posted the heavily edited Hogan sex tape at the center of the lawsuit that killed Gawker, nobody from the defunct site would talk to him. Reached by Fightful for comment as to why, in his view, that was, foź§‚rmer Gawker Executive Editor John Cook responded succinctly: ā€œBecause he's a liar and a fraud with a longstanding grudge against Gawker, which reported truthfully on his PR clients.ā€ Such reporting includes titled ā€œNew York Observer Hires Knoļ·½wn Fraud Ryan Holiday to Help Run Tech Blog,ā€ where writer Nitasha Tiku notes that Holiday has admitted to lying about things likeā€”wait for itā€”the size of his book advances.

Reading the book, the slant felt too powerful. ThešŸ¦© moment that got the ball rolling on all of this, Owen Thomasā€™s 2007 post reporting on how homophobia in Silicon Valley made Thiel reluctant to be public about the fact that heā€™s gay, is noticeably mischaracterized. Holiday characterizes it as devoid of empathy, and while the headline (ā€œPeter Thiel is totally gay, peopleā€) is famously flippant, the text is a thoughtful rumination on the subject matter. Ā Holiday also glosses over how Thielā€™s public criticism of Gawker in that era was reporting things on and . Ā Perhaps even worse, at one point, during the chapter about the initial leak of Hoganā€™s past racist comments to the National Enquirer, one bit appears to be made up out of whole cloth: That Daulerio later admitted to considering leaking it. Not only did that never happen, but the source notes for that chapter donā€™t point to anywhere that Daulerio might have said it and he didnā€™t even have access to it, anyway. Hoganā€™s side has always had pet theories about someone tied to Gawker having done it, but, per rules set by the judge in the sex tape lawsuit, only Gawkerā€™s lawyers had access to the partial transcripts of Hoganā€™s comments. Sharing it with their clientsā€”much less leaking itā€”would have literally cost Gawker the case, and everyone involved was certainly not that dumb.

I did get value out of the book, but of course I would. I covered the case heavily, and anything newā€”like Hogan claiming that he was smuggling a gun in his fanny pack during an FBI sting to catch blackmailers ā€œsellingā€ the sex tapes to himā€”is going to catch my eye. If youā€™re looking for Hogan-specific content (and I really need to point this out on a wrestling website), there isnā€™t much at all. Hearing from the Thiel/Hogan side about how this all came together is legitimately interesting...but thatā€™s just about all there is, and the best stuff (like Thiel and Dā€™Souza admitting to considering illegal options for revenge against Gawker) is quickly being covered online. Perhaps what might have been the juiciest topicā€”Dā€™Souza making cryptic comments about capitalizing on the ā€œGamergateā€ movement, which heavily targeted Gawker Media, gets brushed aside when Thiel and Harder refuse to discuss it on the record. And even if you want to make sure you catch all of it, the almost 300 page book is a very quick read because itā€™s almost astonishingly padded. In between the narrative of what happened, Holiday routinely tries to quote Sun Tzu, invoke historical figures he deems analogous, or some combination of tšŸŒŒhe two. This feels like it takes up close to half of the book. Space thaā–Øt could have been devoted to more background or nuts and bolts about Hogan, the lawsuit, or the titular conspiracy is wasted as Holiday gazes at his navel. Most readers will likely skip several paragraphs at a time to avoid the faux-intellectualism.

In the long run, this bookā€™s historical value may not be in reading it as much as what feels like an inevitable role in the Gawker Media Group bankruptšŸ“–cy proceeding. Slowly, the Gawker estate, controlled by a trustee, has been inching towards pursuing legal action against Thiel. As it would happen, youā€™re not actually supposed to maliciously bankrupt a company, and bankruptcy law allows you to recover money from whoever is responsible. While the investigation that can be undertaken is limited by the terms of the Gawker estateā€™s settlements with Hogan and other Harder clients, thereā€™s still room to move. Whether Thiel and company were aware (and didnā€™t care) or not is unclear, but still, the question remains: Ā Why would Thiel lay out a blueprint of how he did this after considering all sorts of other, illegal options? Especially one that would end up in a book titled ā€œConspiracyā€ that would be heavily promoted with a media tour? Well, for starters, the key interviews were conducted before the potential action against Thiel became much of an issue in bankruptcy court.

(Holiday toldšŸ’ Fightful that the interviews ā€œstarted in fall of 2016;ā€Ā while the matter of the estšŸ”œate going after Thiel , the ball really got rolling .)

The book doesnā€™t really acknowledge that this could become a problem for Thiel, which is kind of the point that Holiday misses. Whatever you think about Gawker, its tone, and its editorial stances, the reasonableš’ˆ” conclusion is that Thiel, backed by a team of lawą¼’yers, either:

  1. Didnā€™t bother to check if there were any laws barring what he was planning, or
  2. Knowingly violated federal bankruptcy law and didnā€™t care because he could just throw money at it.

Maybe there IS a good reason that nobody šŸŒ„else ever did this before Thiel.

Ā 

Get exclusive pro wrestling content on Fightful Select, our premium news service! .