Big media companies have lots of cash. But they’re worried that won’t help them if they can’t find new audiences.
Another Old Media-New Media Bet: Hearst Invests $21 Million in Dude-Centric Complex
Things that dudes like + lots of video = an investable company.


Enter the new breed of digital publishers, who say they can solve that problem. You’re familiar with some of the ways this plays out. Now here’s another one: Hearst is investing $21 million for a minority share in Complex, a network of pop culture websites.
Hearst executive Neeraj Khemlani, who runs the company’s digital studios and steered this investment, will take a board seat at Complex. Complex started out in 2002 as designer Marc Ecko’s fashion magazine and now says it reaches 57 million visitors a month in the U.S. and generates 192 million video views a month.
Khemlani says the impulse behind the deal is the same one that has led Hearst to take stakes in AwesomenessTV and, via its partial ownership in TV programmer A&E, in Vice Media: Hearst knows that digital video is a big deal, and it wants to work with companies that do a lot of digital video.*
“Nobody knows where anything is going, so we’re comfortable taking minority stakes in a bouquet of bets around the most signature brands,” he said.
Hearst’s $21 million is “predominantly” going into Complex as a direct investment, says CEO Rich Antoniello, though some of the money will go back out to early shareholders via secondary sales. Complex says it has raised $52 million to date, including a $25 million investment from Iconix Brand Group in 2013 that valued the company at $174 million.
* Hearst has also made bets on digital publishers BuzzFeed and Refinery29, but those are venture investments, so the company views them as a different kind of wager.
This article originally appeared on Recode.net.











