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by James Brightman on Thursday, January 31, 2008
In the wake of "Gerstmann-gate" it's clear that GameSpot will need to build itself back up again in the eyes of many gamers. The damage has been done, but the remaining editors stand behind their brand and the integrity of the website.
In an interview for our Media Coverage column (now available) to be published with the Friday morning edition of the GameDaily BIZ newsletter, newly promoted Editor-in-Chief Ricardo Torres talked a bit about the Jeff Gerstmann firing, staff morale, and ultimately taking GameSpot forward in 2008.
Regarding Gerstmann he said, "We were all pretty taken aback and surprised by how it all went down. ... Hindsight's always 20/20, and I think we've made it clear that we would have loved to have done things differently, but dwelling on it isn't going to help things. ... Our goal really is to just acknowledge what happened, that we're bummed about it, but we do still need to take Gamespot forward. ... Ultimately content is going to prove to people that we're untainted, uncorrupt and commited to serving our readers."
Later on he added, "I want to make the site better, I want to regain that trust people have lost in us – those that are willing to give us a chance. For some people it's 'never again,' and that's fine. If people want to walk away and just not trust the site, that's their right. But those that are willing to give it a shot, just keep an eye on things, because I think there's a lot of potential here still."
In related news, GameSpot News editor Tor Thorsen – he confirmed to us that it was indeed him – further defended the site's integrity in the comments section of an editorial about GameSpot on Primotech. "The simple fact is, sales has NEVER come over here to the GS edit area and told us how to write a review, ever. In fact, we've been assured repeatedly in the past few weeks that the wall that already stood between edit and sales is being reinforced to avoid any sense of impropriety," he wrote.