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Stats Politics

Nate Silver on the Demise of FiveThirtyEight (natesilver.net) 85

FiveThirtyEight founder Nate Silver, on the site's demise: Last night, as President Trump delivered his State of the Union address, the Wall Street Journal reported that ABC News would lay off the remaining staff at 538 as part of broader cuts within corporate parent Disney. Having been through several rounds of this before, including two years ago when the staff was cut by more than half and my tenure expired too, I know it's a brutal process for everyone involved. It's also tough being in a business while having a constant anvil over your head, as we had in pretty much every odd-numbered (non-election) year from 2017 onward at 538/FiveThirtyEight. I don't know all of the staffers from the most recent iteration of the site, but the ones I have met or who I overlapped with are all extremely conscientious and hard-working people and were often forced to work double-duty as jobs were cut but frequently not replaced. My heart goes out to them, and I'm happy to provide recommendations for people I worked with there.

[...] The basic issue is that Disney was never particularly interested in running FiveThirtyEight as a business, even though I think it could have been a good business. Although they were generous in maintaining the site for so long and almost never interfered in our editorial process, the sort of muscle memory a media property builds early in its tenure tends to stick. We had an incredibly talented editorial staff, but we never had enough "product" people or strategy people to help the business grow and sustain itself. It's always an uphill battle under those conditions, particularly when it comes to recruiting and retaining staff, who were constantly being poached by outlets like the New York Times and the Washington Post.

Nate Silver on the Demise of FiveThirtyEight

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  • Polling Averages (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Friday March 07, 2025 @11:35AM (#65217867) Journal
    The site has really gone downhill since Nate Silver left. However, I am going to miss their polling averages. [fivethirtyeight.com] Outlier polls make news, but the average tells the real story.
    • Their "Atlas of Redistricting" [fivethirtyeight.com] is a really nice visual tool as well that makes an important but pretty dry topic interesting to wrap your head around the alternatives.

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      The site has really gone downhill since Nate Silver left. However, I am going to miss their polling averages. [fivethirtyeight.com] Outlier polls make news, but the average tells the real story.

      I'll be sorry to see it go. It was one of the very few sites that tried to simply look at the data, without biasing what they see based on a political agenda telling them what they want to see.

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      >The site has really gone downhill since Nate Silver left.

      I never found anything on there not written by Silver that was worth the effort to read.

      I tried a few, but they were painful, and I don't think I completed any.

      (ok, so I have a Ph.D. in Economics & Statistics, and know what they're talking about).

      What's fascinating right now is the nitwits (one in the WSJ this morning, even) who think that he screwed up by calculating a 70% chance for Hillary in 2016. Uhm, that's roughly 2/3. When your chan

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        Agreed, I never understood why they took so much heat for that prediction. 70% does not equal 100% and it's not like it wasn't super close. Hilary even got the popular vote.

  • If we aren't going to have more elections?

    • Even if we do have elections, voter suppression is creating a growing gap between how people want to vote and how they can actually vote. Asking them about their intentions prior to the election is becoming increasingly irrelevant.

  • by dskoll ( 99328 )

    Wow. Well, at least our Canadian version [338canada.com] still seems to be going strong.

  • Nobody cares
  • And he did a good job of riding it as far as possible.

  • "The basic issue is that Disney was never particularly interested in running FiveThirtyEight as a business, even though I think it could have been a good business."

    It does not take Superhero powers to figure out that small business like 538 do not typically thrive under the umbrella of big businesses like that. They are peanuts to them, and if typically does not even matter if they are good. I am sorry for the people who put their hearts into it, but maybe people will learn from this .... Nah, who am I kidd

  • I can't imagine the Washington Post poaching staff who tell any uncomfortable truths about President Trump or Co-President Musk in future, so that's a problem that Disney would not have had in future. The NY Times also isn't going to say anything bad about those two (having ceased to do so well before Trump won the election) so they're not a likely poacher either.

    But Disney and ABC are not in the business of broadcasting or publishing anything that the Trump-Musk administration dislikes either, so I guess t

    • I can't imagine the Washington Post poaching staff who tell any uncomfortable truths about President Trump or Co-President Musk in future, so that's a problem that Disney would not have had in future. The NY Times also isn't going to say anything bad about those two (having ceased to do so well before Trump won the election) so they're not a likely poacher either. But Disney and ABC are not in the business of broadcasting or publishing anything that the Trump-Musk administration dislikes either, so I guess
  • we never had enough "product" people or strategy people to help the business grow

    Hey, here's an idea, which doesn't require a marketing staff!

    Start a non-profit organization, and crowdsource your money. I would donate for sure.

    Otherwise, you reap what you sow.

    If 538 started as a 501(c)3 or 501(c)4, or was one under Disney, I apologize for the assumption. My assumption is if ABC News was supporting it, they at least pressured them to be profit-oriented. The quoted text indicates to me that the corporate structure of 538 was the problem.

    • by rta ( 559125 )

      Nate himself is famous enough that he "doing just fine" (AFAIK; not like I know the dude). He maintained ownership of his model and methodology and he's still working on them and publishing on his Substack, where TFA is.

    • by acroyear ( 5882 )

      Originally the Disney buy wasn't in the name of ABC but rather ESPN: applying the statistical models to sports for predictions.

      While they did continue sports reporting 'til the end, I'm guessing the accuracy rate wasn't quite as high as their reputation for political polling was, and they didn't grow. An educated audience doesn't go to back prognosticators when they don't show accuracy, and an uneducated audience only goes to those that keep telling them what they want to have happen and somehow bury their

  • I wonder of the 538 staff had to sign non-competes to prevent them from forming a new company after these layoffs. Assuming they're under a non-compete for two years (Usually the maximum permitted time), that puts us past the midterm election cycle, but maybe will allow a new company to be formed before the next presidential election.

    Before they were bought out be Disney, they had wonderful in-depth reporting of the presidential election polling. It wasn't as good during the last election cycle, and I suspe

  • If you wanted control, you shouldn't have sold out.

    When you sold the business, you gave up the right to determine it's future. Now it is gone, and you are rich.

    So sad. Too bad.

To see a need and wait to be asked, is to already refuse.

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