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Popular gossip publisher Shade Room is back -- for now -- after Facebook ban

Starting a new media company on Facebook sounds great. But there are catches.

Asa Mathat for Vox Media
Peter Kafka
Peter Kafka covered media and technology, and their intersection, at Vox. Many of his stories can be found in his Kafka on Media newsletter, and he also hosts the Recode Media podcast.

The Shade Room, the gossip/pop culture publisher with a huge following on Facebook, is back on Facebook, two days after Facebook gave it the boot.

For now, at least.

The Shade Room’s original Facebook page, which had 4.4 million fans before the social network shut it down on Monday, is still gone. But founder and CEO Angelica Nwandu put up a new one this afternoon at facebook.com/shaderoominc.

Here’s the first post:

The back-and-forth is worth noting because the Shade Room is the best-known example of a publisher that has grown up almost entirely on social media platforms — first on Facebook’s Instagram, and now on Facebook and other social networks as well.

It’s an appealing idea for many digital media publishers, but this week’s news underscores the risk of setting up shop on someone else’s turf.

“It is a wake-up call, and it makes us go even harder to find and get a grip on our audience,” Nwandu said. “At the end of the day, you don’t want to have a company that’s dependent on Facebook.”

Facebook rep Alexa Cassanos says the company took down Nwandu’s Facebook page (its Instagram account remained untouched) because of copyright violations. Facebook had warned The Shade Room “multiple times” after hearing from intellectual property owners, Cassanos said.

Nwandu, who started The Shade Room two years ago and has run it on a shoestring since, acknowledges that she has run into copyright issues before, and has “restructured the company” to prevent new ones. But she says Facebook didn’t cite copyright violations when it took the page down this week; instead it referenced “hateful, threatening or obscene” content.

Here’s a screenshot of the note Nwandu says she received from Facebook:

Nwandu says she can’t figure out what content Facebook is referencing; I’ve asked Facebook reps for additional comment.

The Shade Room is primarily geared toward a black audience, but has quickly gained attention from a broad swath of pop culture. Celebrities like Khloe Kardashian will drop into the comments section of the publisher’s posts to engage with its audience.

Nwandu says she would like to build the company into a brand that works on multiple platforms, including television. So far she’s raised a small angel round, but says she’s resistant to taking on additional investors, since the company is already generating a profit from the ads it sells.

“I have a lot of people who want to invest. At the moment I don’t want to take money,” she said. “The Shade Room is making money. Who’s to say that I can’t bootstrap all the way to the top? I’m only going to take money if I have to.”

Here’s a conversation I had with Nwandu and Matt Bellassai, a video star who launched on BuzzFeed, at the Code/Media conference in February:

https://youtu.be/yKaYGIfOgHo

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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