As someone who identified as pro-GG, I think its greatest victory was training a decent-sized group of people to be wary of the media. By exposing corroboration, dirty dealing, and straight-out lies in the games media, it's my hope that at least some people were able to connect the dots and see that that sort of thing is very likely to be occurring in other specialist or general media outlets as well, and we just can't recognize it as easily because instead of reporting on a hobby we spend hundreds or thousands of hours a year engaging with, they're reporting on war or economics or something else we're not nearly as familiar with.
You're now discussing the state of Journalism as a whole, which is a discussion that IMO, is far larger than Gamergate or even gaming itself.
@KillThemCrackasBabies already covered part of it, and I would have wrote some more thoughts of my own, but that would've taken the discussion way off-topic. I am thinking of making a Deep Thoughts thread for it instead, but that would take time and attention that I don't have at present.
Did GamerGate fix corruption in video games journalism or censorious interference in games? Sadly, no, and I'd still like to see a world without these things. But if they must exist, it's best for people to be aware and on the lookout for them, and to do so in other aspects of life as well. Thus, I disagree with those who say that GG was a complete failure.
Man, You're literally saying that it failed to fix what it set out to fix. That's pretty much a failure in my eyes.
Discussing the why of it is another matter obviously, as well as whether it can succeed in doing so in the future. (I personally think the latter is

).
But yes, you're right in that it's strange that so many of the pro-GG tentpoles would turn out to be such flame-outs. Throw Shoe in there too. Of those you listed, my least favorite is Ian Miles Cheonny-come-lately. Really do not like that guy and how he just attaches himself to things
I honestly think that all of them were pretty much nailed-on to be flame-outs, those aren't people like us, who maybe kept to watching the flames consume all before it, or threw in a few tweets/FB posts here and there. Those were the people who thought of this shit as a bonafide movement that they wanted to lead to glorious victory. And no one would think of it that way except for failures.
It's a similar logic to the aGG cows who went full-retard in pursuing their interests as part of CON for example.
Hadn't really thought of that. Jeremy Hambly raises $100,000,
starts a site, starts a YouTube channel ... and brings in Cheong as basically his second in command, or at any rate that's kind of what it looks like.
The whole thing is probably just an exercise in autism rolled out a decade too late, but in the unlikely event the thing takes off, Cheong is set to reap where others sowed, ain't he? And if it flops, Hambly will be the dude who's gonna take shit for it.
I mentioned that elsewhere, but I cannot wait until that site premieres so we can start making a community watch thread on it, because IMO, it's already nailed-on to be a retarded community with a lot of lulz.
For one, it is founded by a lolcow,
Jeremy Hambly, who proceeded to hire another lolcow,
Ian Miles Cheong as Editor-in-Chief despite having zero experience in editorial roles. They then proceeded to recruit
Sophia Narwitz, who wrote for Niche Gamer and One Angry Gamer (
thread) and is someone I consider to be a lolcalf.
Add to that the crowdfunded element of the site, and the fact that both Hambly and IMC will definitely try and keep up their dumbass internet presences, and you get a pretty great potential thread.
IIRC they're very picky about whom they even let bid. No Peter Thiels or Brietbarts need apply, sadly. But wouldn't that be a hoot?
1) We don't know if the Breitbart people or Thiel are even bidding on this in the 1st place.
2) Being selective about who you sell your property to isn't an inherently bad thing. You have the right to protect the value of your investment, and selling those sites to either of your two examples would alienate the core audiences those sites shoot for.