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Mic.com is in talks to sell to Bustle

Sale talks started after Facebook ended a video deal with Mic.

Mic.com co-founder and CEO Chris Altchek, left, onstage with co-founder and Editor at Large Jake Horowitz 
Mic.com co-founder and CEO Chris Altchek, left, onstage with co-founder and Editor at Large Jake Horowitz 
Mic.com co-founder and CEO Chris Altchek, left, onstage with co-founder and Editor at Large Jake Horowitz
Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for Grey Goose
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.

Mic.com, a digital publisher with a millennial focus, is in talks to sell at least part of the company to Bustle Digital Group, a publisher that has focused on millennial women. The sale talks come after Facebook canceled a video series with Mic that had provided an important source of revenue to the publisher.

Mic acknowledged in September that it had been discussing selling the company to a different — unnamed — buyer. The company had also been talking about raising more money.

The Facebook deal was part of a news video initiative championed by Campbell Brown, Facebook’s global head of news partnerships. Sources say it could have paid Mic around $5 million over the course of 12 months. Potential sales and funding rounds went away after Facebook didn’t renew, according to people familiar with Mic, leaving the publisher with limited options.

“They became very dependent on Facebook and they went all in on it, and they got burned,” said a person familiar with Mic’s strategy.

Mic employs more than 100 people and has raised more than $60 million. Right now, it looks like Bustle would consider bringing in half or less of the Mic staff. A Mic rep declined to comment; Facebook declined to comment; Bustle CEO Bryan Goldberg wasn’t reachable for comment.

Mic and Bustle share a common investor in AT&T’s Warner Media. This year, Goldberg acquired the Gawker.com website in a bankruptcy auction.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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