The Story of How Barstool Sports Got Sold

“Barstool Sports” and Sports Illustrated's “The Cauldron” lie on very different ends of the blog spectrum. You know this much because if you read SportsGrid your sensibilities probably lie somewhere between the two, so you've undoubtedly visited both

Jared Carrabis, fresh off being named Barstool Sports' full-time MLB writer, joins Rob Bradford. The pair talk Carrabis' path to his current lot in life, while also exploring the reporter vs. blogger dynamic. Some Red Sox talk is also mixed in.

In the meantime, congrats to the guys at Barstool. And if you are interested in listening to a discussion about online sports business today I'd encourage those of you who missed it live or on podcast to listen to the conversation I had on Wednesday

Barstool Sports, the fantastically popular network of sports sites that began in Massachusetts in the early 2000s, announced that it has been sold to The Chernin Group for an undisclosed fee. Barstool founder David Portnoy made the announcement during

Fortune's Dan Primack reveals the details of how investment firm the Chernin Group went about buying a majority stake in controversial sports comedy website Barstool Sports. The deal values the site at as much as $15 million and it gives the Chernin