After 13 years, I'm leaving CNET. Looking back on a long career, I can
be sure of just one thing: I'm leaving here with a lot of love.
At the end of this month, I'll turn the last page of the longest single
chapter of my life: 13 years at CNET (minus a brief departure in 2003 to
O'Reilly Media), during which I've done just about every editorial job
possible, and developed a career that was completely unexpected,
wonderful, and enriching. I've grown up at CNET, and now I've decided to
leave the nest. I'll be pursuing independent projects that I'm extremely excited about.
More details on that will be forthcoming, and you can check my blog, TheMolly, for more.
I've had an incredible and, looking back, incredibly long journey
at CNET. I think it's never been stronger -- whether with new pursuits
like Appliances and the Spanish-language sites or its sterling cast of
reviewers, reporters, and the TV team. I'm proud to call these people my
friends and colleagues, and I'm excited to watch and support this
remarkable brand from afar. I never intended to become a tech journalist. I studied journalism at the University of Montana
and had dreams of being a foreign correspondent, or of moving to D.C.
to take over Helen Thomas' chair at the White House. I went to work for
the Associated Press, where I covered all kinds of crazy
hard news and a little sports writing, too.
And although I loved news, I didn't love the hours, the lonely late
nights in the newsroom, and the
depressing stories. So, when a friend
needed a roommate in Oakland in 1999, I packed up my truck and I drove
to California. I got a job at MacHome Journal, where I got a crash course in tech reporting. I attended my first MacWorld, got mesmerized by Steve Jobs, reviewed the
iMac DV, and discovered that I'd been dating nerdy boys for a reason. I was a geek, deep down inside.
Soon, I homed in on CNET -- it had the best grammar and the most
professional tone I'd seen online. Lindsey Turrentine hired me as an
associate editor on the Software and Internet Services beat, and I went
on to review Apple hardware and software (I got yelled at by Apple PR a
lot along the way). A lot. And Lindsey became one of my best friends,
and the maid of honor at my wedding.
In 2004, after a few more job changes, my CNET career took an unexpected
hard left. Mark Larkin, who was running the then-nascent CNET TV team,
suggested that I do a video version of the Daily Buzz. And around the
same time, our then general manager Candy Meyers suggested that Tom and I
do a podcast, to capitalize on a growing trend in media.
So, Buzz Out Loud and the Buzz Report
was born -- and you know the rest. The Buzz Report became, to my
knowledge, the longest-running Web series online, airing from 2005 until
its end in 2012. And Buzz Out Loud, well. Buzz Out Loud changed me
forever. That show introduced me to the idea -- and the power -- of an
online community. The BOL audience became our muses, our guides, our
constant companions, and our friends. Everything I've done since has
been informed by that show and always will be.
Plus, of course, I did a little of everything at CNET: BOL, Buzz Report, Mailbag, Today in Tech History, and Gadgettes
... and I haven't forgotten you, either, TiVo people. And Larkin and I
and the CNET TV team built CNET video into best tech video destination
on the Web. It wasn't always pretty, but we were and are damn proud of it.
And then came Always On. When Buzz Out Loud ended, I wanted to do
something totally different, and I was intrigued by the idea of trying
to create a broadcast-quality show at CNET. I am incredibly lucky that
CNET gave me both the platform, the runway, the trust, and the funding
to develop an entirely new show, with a completely different focus and
breadth.
And what an experience it's been. I learned how to executive produce a
22-minute show: budgeting, graphics, production planning, and hiring
some amazing new people. Together we went to Paris, Barcelona, Vegas,
LA, Vail, Hawaii, and on countless other adventures. I got to ride an America's Cup catamaran, jump out of a helicopter, and shove a two-foot-long thermometer down my nose. In service to the show I even trained for and ran my first half marathon. We took technology into the real world with a bang, and it was fun.
I am so proud of the show we created, and in producing Always On I
formed yet another family within my already large, already extended CNET
family.
So this is the point where I know it seems crazy to leave a show, a
family, and a company that's been so fun, wonderful, supportive, and
loving for so many years. And maybe it is. But I've lived a lifetime
inside these walls. I had three or four different jobs, at least -- I
got married, I had a child, I got a divorce, and along the way, I grew
up. For me, it's just time to move on. I love Always On, but I'm
happiest when I'm a writer and a podcaster. I love CNET, but I'm ready
to take sole ownership of my career, my brand, and my time.
So, it's time for the next adventure. I will always have CNET's back,
and I will always be grateful for the opportunities I've had here, for
the platform I've been given, and for the people I've been lucky enough
to work with. And if you see me pop up now and then, don't be surprised.
Some things, you never let go of completely. And to you, the audience,
my friends and community, I hope you'll all join me on my next
adventure, and thanks for everything you've given me so far. See you on
the other side.
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