Elizabeth Spiers is a contributing writer at Fortune magazine. Her upcoming debut novel, And They All Die in the End, will be published by Riverhead (an imprint of Penguin Books).
She also consults to companies on web media strategies and editorial development for print and online publications. Previously, she was the Publisher and Founder of Dead Horse Media, an online media company, which produces DealBreaker.com (a Wall Street tabloid), AboveTheLaw.com (a legal tabloid) and Fashionista.com (a fashion tabloid).
She was named one of Interview magazine's "Pop A-List: 50 To Watch" and one of Dazed and Confused magazine's "Digital 50" in 2007, Institutional Investor's "30 Under 30" in 2006, one of Women's Wear Daily's "Ones to Watch" in October of 2004 and one of AlwaysOn/Technorati's Open Media 100 in June of 2005.
Until November of 2005, she was the editor-in-chief of mediabistro.com, where she launched six new blogs and implemented a 90-day site redesign. Prior to mediabistro, she was a contributing writer at New York magazine, covering entertainment, media, and business and editing the magazine's Intelligencer section.
Spiers was previously the founding editor of Gawker.com, a weblog about "the darker Manhattan-centric themes: class warfare as recreational sport; pathological status obsession; and the complete, total, and wholly unapologetic embrace of decadence." Gawker was named to Entertainment Weekly's 2003 "IT list", one of Time magazine's "Top 50 Websites" for 2003, a "Best Media Blog" (2003) by Forbes, and a "Best of Breed" online news site by the New York New Media Association. Spiers was named "Best Gossip" by the Village Voice ("Best of New York") in 2003.
Prior to Gawker, Spiers was a buy-side financial analyst focusing on small cap tech equities and (prior to that) early stage venture capital. Spiers earned a BA in Public Policy and Political Science from Duke University.
She has also written for Fast Company, Slate, The New Republic Online, Salon.com, Jane, Radar, Black Book, The Face, The New York Times, The New York Sun, the New York Observer and The New York Post, (including the notorious Page Six). She has spoken at various media and technology conferences and been a guest commentator on CNN, Fox News, CBS Marketwatch, MSNBC, VH1 and NPR. She also contributed to Bookmark Now, an anthology about reading and technology, published by Basic Books in 2005, and Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys, an anthology published by Dutton in April of 2007.
[Photo credit: Paul Sarkis]
