Fleshbot
Fleshbot is an American sex-oriented blog and online publication that covers the adult entertainment industry, erotica, and sex in popular culture. Launched on November 10, 2003, by Nick Denton as part of the Gawker Media network, it was the third title established by the company following Gizmodo and Gawker. The site gained early prominence for its coverage of celebrity sex tapes and its editorial approach, which combined adult content with a witty, journalistic tone. Unlike many contemporary adult outlets, Fleshbot is noted for its non-segregated coverage of both heterosexual and homosexual media.
Over its history, the publication has undergone several changes in ownership. In 2012, it was divested from Gawker Media and acquired by its then-editor-in-chief, Lux Alptraum. It was subsequently purchased in 2014 by SK Intertainment—the parent company of Mr. Skin—and later by NSFW.Army in 2021. Beyond its news and curation services, the site is well known for hosting the annual Fleshbot Awards, a ceremony that recognizes performers and creators across various sectors of the adult industry.
History
2003–2004: Beginning with Gawker Media
's president, Nick Denton, originally came up with the idea for Fleshbot because he wanted a place where he could easily find his pornography of choice, and aimed to feature explicit pornography rather than "airbrushed erotica". He wanted the content to be provocative enough for online discussion, with a tone that was both witty and intelligent, without being overly serious. "The idea was to take some of the new stuff that's emerging online and bring that up to readers in a way that was intelligent and professional," he stated. Denton's content strategy focused on three criteria: the availability of material to link to, reader interest, and advertising potential. He concluded that pornography clearly satisfied all three requirements.The venture kept investment costs low by utilizing cheap software and curated content while leveraging free viral marketing for growth. Jonno d'Addario was employed as the sole editor and provided a restricted salary of $2,500 per month while working remotely from New Orleans. The editor was eligible for bonuses if he managed to generate significant spikes in traffic. His role involved actively scanning the web for the best tidbits and compiling annotated links, a task supplemented by tips received from both readers and published authors. Financially, the blog depended almost exclusively on advertising online, targeting specific keywords on Google's search engine, while relying on Google AdSense program to generate the bulk of its revenue.
Launched on November 10, 2003, Fleshbot served as the third mainstream weblog under the Gawker Media umbrella, after the establishment of Gawker and Gizmodo. During its launch week, the blog gained attention for posting stills and free links to Paris Hilton's sex tape. The site claimed it was the first publication to release both the still images and the video online. Denton said that he had received one of the first copies of the tape via email from an anonymous source. The high volume of traffic caused the server to crash. The site attracted 170,000 page views on its first day and quickly soared to over one million by the end of its first week, surpassing Gawker in traffic.
2005–2009: Continued popularity and controversies
By 2005, Fleshbot was one of the most popular adult-oriented blogs, and the most popular site in the Gawker Media network, attracting nearly two million unique visitors per month. A Comscore study ranked the site among the most-visited blogs of the year's first quarter, based on the digital footprints of over two million users. Daily traffic quadrupled from 75,000 unique views in 2005 to 300,000 the following year. This growth occurred despite a lack of inbound links, as most readers preferred not to link to the site publicly. Following Google AdSense's exit from the adult sector, the site transitioned to alternative vendors like MarketBanker. Despite the move, its $125 weekly text ads have remained sold out since launch. D'Addario credits this consistent demand to a combination of organic word-of-mouth and steadily rising traffic.In 2004, Denton launched Fleshbot Films, a label dedicated to erotica. D'Addario emphasized that the label aimed to distribute content that "people aren't accustomed to seeing in the world of adult film." Its debut release was a fully-restored version of Ed Wood's final film, Necromania. That July, Fleshbot published a link to a site featuring a topless Cameron Diaz in a 1992 film. D'Addario denied any liability, noting that Fleshbot did not host or sell the content directly. The Los Angeles Superior Court banned the distribution of the footage and issued a cease-and-desist letter to the site's owners. In August 2009, Gawker published edited segments of a 12-minute home video featuring Eric Dane naked with his wife Rebecca Gayheart and Kari Ann Peniche. Despite containing no actual sex acts, an uncensored version of the video drove over 1.2 million views on Fleshbot by the end of the year. The couple responded with a $1 million lawsuit for copyright infringement, demanding the video's immediate removal. Gawker Media ultimately complied, pulling the clip and settling the dispute through private mediation in 2010. The following year, the site published stolen nude photographs of actress Scarlett Johansson obtained via a mobile phone hack. Following immediate legal threats, Gawker Media removed the images from the site.
Gawker Media began using the payroll service ADP in 2009 to handle its human resources duties. Because ADP's guidelines forbid partnering with pornographic sites, they refused to process paychecks for Fleshbot staff. To solve this, Denton split Fleshbot into a separate limited liability company, took personal ownership of the site, and, for at least the first few months, paid the staffers' salaries himself using his own handwritten checks. While legally structured as a separate entity to appease hesitant advertisers, Fleshbot remained functionally integrated with Gawker, sharing the same office, technical staff, and payroll. This arrangement forced Gawker employees to operate the adult site against their will, leading to significant internal conflict. Gawker Media also removed Fleshbot from its public roster of properties.
2010–2013: Decline and acquired by Lux Alptraum
In 2010, Fleshbot was among the properties compromised in a security breach targeting Gawker Media. A group of hackers exposed over 1 million usernames, emails, and passwords, along with Gawker's source code and private internal staff conversations. The stolen data was leaked as a 500 MB file on a public file-sharing site. That year, Fleshbot became the company's worst-performing site for attracting new readers, with domestic traffic dropping to approximately one million unique monthly visitors.In early 2011, Fleshbot and its sister sites debuted a year-long redesign that British author Felix Salmon heralded as "the biggest event in Gawker Media history". For the first time in years, the platform reintroduced outbound links to its home pages. In November, editor Lux Alptraum announced that Fleshbot was for sale and no longer part of the Gawker network. Denton admitted the site had been a brand outlier for years and he held onto the property because " slow to realize the inevitable", while Alptraum noted that the parent company's "sales strategy and technology platform have ceased to effectively support Fleshbots needs". In a 2012 interview, Alptraum further explained that the split was driven by the hesitation of advertisers and banks to be associated with adult content. By the time it hit the market, Fleshbot was generating 25 million monthly page views, roughly 5 percent of Gawker Media's total audience. Gawker eventually posted uncensored celebrity sex videos, taking over Fleshbot role within the Gawker Media network.
Following a two-month search for a buyer, Alptraum acquired Fleshbot and assumed the role of CEO in February 2012. She previously joined Gawker in 2007 and was named editor-in-chief of Fleshbot in October 2008. During her tenure at Gawker, Alptraum noted that Fleshbot was unable to reach its full potential due to the constraints of the platform's layout and a restrictive advertising strategy. She believed that transitioning away from Gawker Media would grant the site the freedom it needed to flourish. She revealed that the short sales timeline had prevented other interested parties from finalizing bids in time, ultimately facilitating her purchase of the property. During the acquisition, journalists examined Fleshbots profitability. Salmon suggested that advertising revenue for adult platforms like Fleshbot had sharply declined. He attributed this struggle to strong competition from Gawker itself and the adult-content community on Tumblr. Peter Kafka of All Things Digital noted that the site's explicit content limited its commercial potential, while Ben McGrath of The New Yorker wrote that the site was "a drag on the reputable kind of advertising that Denton now covets".
In 2013, Fleshbot underwent another redesign focused on a more cohesive user experience and advanced monetization. The site migrated from Gawker Media's custom publishing software to WordPress, enabling the use of standardized advertising formats tailored for the adult industry. Alptraum expanded the brand with the launch of Fleshbot Fiction, an erotica imprint specifically curated for women. The venture focused on high-quality stories, leveraging the e-book format to offer single titles at a low price point. Under the ownership of Gawker Media, Fleshbot previously maintained a legal stance that it was not required to comply with Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act, a federal law regarding record-keeping and labeling for adult content. However, after Alptraum's acquisition, the publication reversed this position and brought its operations into full legal compliance.
In May, Denton filed papers in the New York Supreme Court, alleging that Alptraum had failed to pay the purchase price for Fleshbot. According to the filing, Alptraum had signed a promissory note for $100,000, to be paid in four installments of $25,000; Denton claimed none of these payments were ever made. Alptraum countered with accusations of breach of contract and fraud, alleging that Denton had reneged on his promise to transfer the site's URLs and domain codes. In an interview, Denton characterized the site as a "poison pill", admitting it had become more trouble than it was worth.