James Murdoch acquires New York Magazine and Vox Media podcasts in $300 million media shake-up
Lupa Systems buys key Vox assets including Vox.com and New York Magazine as digital media group splits amid industry downturn
A structural restructuring of Vox Media’s core publishing and audio businesses is driving a major ownership transfer in U.S. digital journalism, as investor James Murdoch’s Lupa Systems agrees to acquire New York Magazine, Vox.com, and the Vox Media Podcast Network in a deal valued at more than $300 million.
What is confirmed is that the transaction transfers some of Vox Media’s most influential consumer-facing properties into a new company under Lupa Systems, while the remaining portfolio will be spun off into a separate independent entity.
The deal effectively splits Vox Media into two businesses, separating high-profile editorial and podcast brands from other digital media assets.
The acquired portfolio includes New York Magazine and its major digital verticals such as The Cut, Vulture, Intelligencer, Curbed, and Grub Street.
It also includes Vox.com, known for explanatory journalism across video, text, and audio formats, and the Vox Media Podcast Network, which distributes a large slate of podcasts with global audiences.
These properties collectively reach tens of millions of users and include subscription-supported journalism as well as advertising-driven content.
The assets not included in the transaction—such as The Verge, Eater, SB Nation, The Dodo, and Popsugar—will remain with Vox Media in a separate company structure led by its existing management team.
This separation formalizes a long-running strategic tension inside digital media groups between scaled technology-driven publishing platforms and premium editorial brands with stronger subscription economics.
The deal, structured through Lupa Systems, places James Murdoch at the center of one of the most recognizable clusters of English-language cultural and political media outside traditional broadcast television.
Murdoch, who previously led major global media companies including 21st Century Fox and Sky, has increasingly positioned Lupa Systems as a vehicle for long-form journalism, cultural production, and podcasting infrastructure.
The transaction reflects broader financial pressure across digital media.
Over the past several years, companies built on social-media-driven traffic and venture capital expansion have faced declining valuations, slower advertising growth, and reduced platform referrals.
In response, several publishers have reorganized, sold assets, or split operations to stabilize revenue and reduce exposure to volatile audience distribution channels.
New York Magazine in particular has remained commercially resilient relative to many print-origin competitors due to its subscription growth and strong performance of its digital verticals.
Vox Media’s podcast network has also become a central revenue engine, reflecting the continued shift of media consumption toward on-demand audio programming supported by advertising and live events.
Under the agreement, the newly formed Lupa-owned company will operate under the Vox Media name and continue publishing across digital and audio formats.
Completion of the transaction is expected in the coming weeks, after which editorial and operational integration will begin across the acquired properties, locking in a new ownership structure for some of the most influential cultural journalism brands in the U.S. media landscape.