The Website That Found Mainstream Fame With Anthony Weiner's Penis May Have A Bigger Problem
Nik Richie the Dirty
Nik Richie the Dirty

Courtesy of Nik Richie

The Dirty founder Nik Richie

Last month, TheDirty.com had a problem. The site's servers were struggling under the weight of the extra visitors directed to Anthony Weiner's "Carlos Danger" sexts and, later, photographs of the New York mayoral candidate's penis.

"You're talking about anywhere from 20,000 to 30,000 people seeing the site at one time when on average we're doing 3,000 people per second," founder Nik Richie says. In total, the Weiner stories' 30 million hits led to the gossip site's servers crashing five times. The servers have since been replaced, Richie says. "It cost money, but we fought through the storm."

While Richie — a 34-year-old entrepreneur born in New Jersey as Hooman Karamian — says that the site made little extra income off the story, overall he's very happy — it created a brand awareness for a website that had long skirted the outside of East Coast-dominated mainstream media.

However, not long after the Weiner story broke, The Dirty had a new problem — a problem which, according to Richie, may be an existential threat for the site. Last Monday U.S. District Judge William O. Bertelsman sided with an ex-NFL cheerleader and upheld a $338,000 libel verdict against the site — a big sum for a website that Richie says only employs three people.

The court's decision related to two posts The Dirty published in 2009 about a former Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader and high school teacher named Sarah Jones. Here are the posts as described by the Associated Press:

In the first, Jones is pictured smiling for the camera with a former kicker for the Bengals with a caption that says she had sex with every single member of the team. The second showed her in a bikini from one of the Bengals calendars, claimed that her ex-husband contracted chlamydia and gonorrhea after cheating on her with more than 50 women, and that he likely gave it to her.

The posts themselves appear to be removed, but Jones is still a huge presence on The Dirty, with posts going back years describing both her alleged escapades and her legal battle with The Dirty itself (one notable headline from last year says "Sarah Jones Is A Pathological Liar"). Jones went on to gain national exposure when she admitted to a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old student (the pair are now engaged).

In a way, that Jones would be turned into a micro-celebrity by The Dirty and then turn on it, exposes the site's greatest strengths and its greatest danger. Richie founded the site anonymously in 2007 while living in Scottsdale, Ariz. Originally called Dirtyscottsdale.com, the site sought to bring attention to local celebrities that were not big enough to attract the attention of a TMZ or Perez Hilton.