The tech industry in the City of Angels is booming and Dot.La, a new digital media startup, wants to tell its story.
“I think the L.A. tech scene now has all the ingredients for this booming decade,” dot.LA co-founder Spencer Rascoff said. “One of the only things missing was that steady drumbeat of local journalism that can amplify what's happening here and shine a light on all the innovation in the LA startup community.”
Rascoff attributes L.A.’s recipe for success to the city’s broad economy, where tech sits at the intersection of media, entertainment, fashion and pop culture. The city harbors companies that probably couldn’t exist anywhere else, according to the dot.LA exec, like Snap, parent company of Snapchat, and GOAT, an e-commerce shop for sneakerheads.
“The tastemakers are here, the celebrities are here, this is where brands get built,” Rascoff said.
The company started with a newsletter and plans to launch a website covering the city’s tech industry this month. Rascoff and his peers got to work as soon as they began pitching dot.LA to potential investors, strategically picking people and companies in order to create community buy-in. While the company works on expanding its coverage into social media, video and podcast, it will also be building out an events business.
“Here in L.A., there’s a ton going on in tech but it's more spread out [than in San Francisco] and there’s no organizing force to the community and no journalism,” Rascoff said. “So we think dot.LA can provide an opportunity for [someone] to become more informed about his or her career and build a network with others in tech.”
Rascoff previously served as CEO of Zillow and hopes to bring the inclusive environment he helped create there to dot.LA.
“[We were] focused on diversity and inclusion and equity and belonging,” he said said. “That’s certainly something we’re going to replicate at dot.LA, [not only] internally at the company but also in terms of the stories that we tell.”
Elon Musk may not have founded Tesla, but he has become the company, and it’s become him. Now sales are plummeting. Is he toxic for the Tesla?
About 780,000 pressure washers sold at retailers like Home Depot are being recalled across the U.S. and Canada, due to a projectile hazard that has resulted in fractures and other injuries among some consumers.
Europeans upset with Elon Musk still aren’t buying his electric cars, adding to a long losing streak for his company.
President Donald Trump has fired one of two Democratic members of the U.S. Surface Transportation Board to break a 2-2 tie ahead of the board considering the largest railroad merger ever proposed.
Ford is recalling more than 355,000 of its pickup trucks across the U.S. because of an instrument panel display failure that’s resulted in critical information, like warning lights and vehicle speed, not showing up on the dashboard.
Nvidia reported a 56% increase in second-quarter revenue and a 59% rise in net income compared to a year ago.
The Rev. Al Sharpton is set to lead a protest march on Wall Street to urge corporate America to resist the Trump administration’s campaign to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. The New York civil rights leader will join clergy, labor and community leaders Thursday in a demonstration through Manhattan’s Financial District that’s timed with the anniversary of the Civil Rights-era March on Washington in 1963. Sharpton called DEI the “civil rights fight of our generation." He and other Black leaders have called for boycotting American retailers that scaled backed policies and programs aimed at bolstering diversity and reducing discrimination in their ranks.
President Donald Trump's administration last month awarded a $1.2 billion contract to build and operate what's expected to become the nation’s largest immigration detention complex to a tiny Virginia firm with no experience running correction facilities.
Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos claims audiences don't want to watch Netflix movies in theaters, but that seems not to be the case recently.
Chipmaker Nvidia is poised to release a quarterly report that could provide a better sense of whether the stock market has been riding an overhyped artificial intelligence bubble or is being propelled by a technological boom that’s still gathering momentum.
Load More