Web 3-Savvy Media Outlet Dirt Raises $1.2M in Seed Round
The newsletter seeks to bolster its DAO and NFT sales with the funding.

Entertainment and culture newsletter Dirt said Monday it raised $1.2 million in seed funding to build out its Web 3 infrastructure.
The round was led by crypto investment fund Collab + Currency, with contributions from Offline Adventures, Flamingo DAO, Spice Capital, Unicorn DAO and Matt Hackett.
Dirt sustains its media ecosystem through non-fungible token (NFT) sales, but its network of freelancers doesn't solely cover crypto topics. Even so, Dirt aims to build a Web 3 community through NFTs, its DIRT governance token and DirtDAO, which will oversee access to exclusive content for token holders.
“Web3 creates additional pathways to fandom beyond just purchasing a subscription or a tote bag – it also turns media into a two-way street, where subscribers can make appropriate decisions about the direction of the publication,” said Dirt contributors in a blog post.
Journalists Kyle Chayka and Daisy Alioto co-founded Dirt last year, and in partnership with NFT platform Mirror, began selling content as NFTs. Dirt made $20,000 in NFT sales in its first full day, according to Axios writer Sara Fischer.
Dirt’s NFTs have generated four ETH in trading volume on OpenSea since September.
UPDATE (May 10, 01:50 UTC): Adds co-founder's name.
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Every crypto exchange saw liquidations during the Oct. 10 liquidation event, Richard Teng told the crowd at CoinDesk's Consensus Hong Kong.
What to know:
- Binance Co-CEO Richard Teng said the Oct. 10 crypto crash, which saw about $19 billion in liquidations, was driven by macro shocks like new U.S. tariffs on China and rare earth controls, not by Binance itself.
- Roughly 75% of liquidations occurred around 9 p.m. Eastern amid a stablecoin depegging and transfer slowdowns, but Teng said trading data show no massive withdrawals from Binance, which he said supported affected users.
- Teng argued that crypto remains tied to geopolitical and interest-rate uncertainty, yet institutional and corporate participation continues to grow even as retail demand has cooled.











