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How to Pitch Gizmodo, io9, and Earther

This post is updated as our requirements and interests for freelance pitches change.

We’re always happy to review pitches from freelancers who want to write ambitious investigative and narrative features, reported mid-length pieces, and first-person essays. Expose something. Take us somewhere. Tell us your incredible personal story. Send us a truly original take. Here’s how to pitch us and what we are looking for right now for our technology, culture, consumer tech, io9, Earther, and science coverage areas. This post will be updated as our needs change.

How to Email Your Pitch

Send your pitches to [email protected]. Include “pitch” in the email subject. Include a description of your pitch, who you’re hoping to interview for the piece (if applicable), potential headline ideas, estimated turnaround, and links to your previously published work. If your story overlaps desks or is an outlier, send it over anyway!

Technology and Culture

Illustration: Angelica Alzona (Gizmodo)

We’d love to see pitches of experiential reports from extraordinary happenings, profiles of pioneers and radicals or powerful conspiracists and crafty conpeople, and engaging tales from the historic depths and wild fringes of the internet. Explore the intersection of tech, life, culture, and subcultures. Previously (by staff and freelancers):

My Dad Was a Spy, Maybe

Ong’s Hat: The Early Internet Conspiracy Game That Got Too Real

The Survivors of the Coming Apocalypse Just Wanna Have Fun

Horror Stories From Inside Amazon’s Mechanical Turk

The Fake Sex Doctor Who Conned the Media Into Publicizing His Bizarre Research on Suicide, Butt-Fisting, and Bestiality

Some Crypto-Capitalists Just Want to See the World Burn

The Rise of the Skeleton King, the ‘80s Bone Dealer Who Changed Halloween

When a Stranger Decides to Destroy Your Life

How Cartographers for the U.S. Military Inadvertently Created a House of Horrors in South Africa

She Built a Shady Guru’s YouTube Army. Now She’s His Fiercest Critic—But Who Will Believe Her?

An Oral History of the Early Trans Internet

How ITT Tech Screwed Students and Made Millions

Additionally, to compliment our news coverage, we’re looking for accessible overviews, detailed breakdowns, and deeper dives on our core coverage areas—tech and labor, sweeping policy changes, corporate misdeeds, privacy and security, and more. We also want speculative pieces (like on the future of automation, AI, or quantum computing) as well as more hopeful, forward-looking, tech-done-well themes. Previously (by staff and freelancers):

Your Travel Guide to the Rudderless Right-Wing Web After Trump

The Gentle Side of Twitch

How Facebook Outs Sexworkers

The Deadly Recklessness of the Self-Driving Car Industry

‘Robots’ Are Not ‘Coming for Your Job’—Management Is

Harassment, Transphobia, and Racism: A Look Inside Blind’s Anonymous Chatting Forum for Google Employees

Reddit Is Tearing Itself Apart

Belarus Turned Off the Internet. Its Citizens Hot-Wired It.

QAnon, CultTok, and Leaving It All Behind

Amazon’s Last Mile

Consumer Technology

Illustration: Jim Cooke (Gizmodo)

Aside from narrative and investigative features about consumer technology, we’re currently looking for oral histories of notable gadgets. We’d like stories on product design, accessible technology, and some reporting on the global chip crunch and its effects on everything. We accept consumer tech reviews on a case by case basis. Consider submitting an idea for one of our recurring series: nostalgic essays on defunct tech and roundups of tech history’s greatest fails. Previously (by staff and freelancers):

Does My Smartwatch’s Sleep Tracker Actually Do Anything?

A Pilot’s Review of Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020

How I Let Disney Track My Every Move

The Anti-Rape Gadgets That Never Delivered

How the Invention of Spreadsheet Software Unleashed Wall Street on the World

Your AI Chatbot Therapist Isn’t Sure What It’s Doing

The Future of Online Dating Is Unsexy and Brutally Effective

In 2030, You Won’t Own Any Gadgets

What Will Quantum Computer Games Be Like?

The Never-Ending Death of Smart Home Gadgets

Key Crazy: Inside the Wonderful World of Keyboard Fanatics

io9

Image: Elena Scotti (Gizmodo)

We welcome more oral histories—especially on cult classics—as well as features on the state of Hollywood and working in Hollywood from multiple sources; well-known and behind-the-scenes, generally and especially in regards to diversity and inclusion issues. io9 would like thoughtful essays on genre fiction from personal perspectives, in-depth reported features on any of our coverage areas, and nuanced opinions on big franchises. We are not looking for recaps, reviews of films or television episodes (unless you have non-film expertise on the subject), most lists, or fiction (unless we’re specifically asking for fiction submissions). Previously (by staff and freelancers):

Comics, Contracts, & Covid: Inside the Scandal at Terrific Production

How Star Wars’ Fan Wiki Found Itself in a Fight Over Trans Identity

Filmmakers Reflect on Reign of Fire, 18 Years After the Bizarre Blockbuster Bomb Became a Cult Film

Punisher: War Zone Director Lexi Alexander on the Curious Journey to Cult Status

To Boldly Stay: How Deep Space Nine Upended Star Trek by Exposing Utopia’s Dark Side

The Sexist Legacy in Star Trek’s Progressive Universe

Staircases in Space: Why Are Places in Science Fiction Not Wheelchair-Accessible?

‘Bionic Actress’ Angel Giuffria Is Ready for People With Disabilities to Get Their Close-Up

Why We Need Utopian Fiction Now More Than Ever

What Arrival Gets Right About Talking to Superintelligent Noisesquids From Space

A Medievalist’s Guide to Magic and Alchemy in A Discovery of Witches

Earther

Photo: Brian Kahn (Gizmodo)

Earther is interested in communities on the frontlines of the climate crisis, in-depth reporting on Big Oil and other bad actors, and the technology that could help (or harm) the climate. We’re looking for things at the intersection of climate and culture and what it says about society and our relationship to climate change. We’re also very interested in technology that affects people’s daily lives and carbon footprints—heat pumps, smart thermostats, induction stoves—both in how they can address emissions and how they can be linked with greater governmental support so everyone has access. Previously (by staff and freelancers):

The Big Oil Instagram Influencers Are Here

The Quietest Place in America Is Becoming a Warzone

Ted Lasso Is an Unexpected Masterclass in Environmental Storytelling

Beyond the Hype of Lab-Grown Diamonds

Recycling Is Broken

Space Tourism Is a Waste

NASA Is Sinking Into the Ocean

This Town Didn’t Want to Be a Radioactive Waste Dump. The Government Is Giving Them No Choice.

The Machines That Could Darken the Sun to Stop Climate Change

The Planet Needs a New Internet

How Google, Microsoft, and Big Tech Are Automating the Climate Crisis

The Battle for Bad River

Science

Illustration: Elena Scotti (Photos: Getty Images, Shutterstock)

We’re looking for stories that showcase the world of science and health from many angles, whether it’s a profile of a researcher obsessed with a vexing problem, a nitty-gritty explainer on how a particle accelerator works, a tale of patients fighting to get the treatment they need, a photo essay of a fossil excavation, or an investigation into a pseudoscientific scam, to name a few possibilities. We welcome pitches for both short- and long-form stories. Previously (by staff and freelancers):

The Last of the Iron Lungs

How the Universe Ends

How DNA Testing Botched My Family’s Heritage, and Probably Yours, Too

The Challenges of Unravelling Long Covid

Blood Feasts and Roach Vacuums: The Life of an Urban Pest Scientist

The Scientists Who Won’t Give Up on the Warp Drive

Humans Will Never Colonize Mars

Why the FDA Can’t Fix the Opioid Crisis

DARPA’s Brain Chip Implants Could Be the Next Big Mental Health Breakthrough—Or a Total Disaster

Inside the Fight to Legalize Psilocybin Therapy in Oregon

How American Healthcare Is Failing Transgender Patients

A So-Called Game-Changing Weight Loss Drug Is Here—So What Happens Next?

For Men Who Will Try Anything to Get Taller, There’s a World of Grifts and Gimmicks

How to Make a Black Hole in a Science Lab

Invoicing and Payment

We’ll begin the invoicing process as soon as you file your first draft. You will need to create a profile in our internal system. Once published, you will invoice through the system with a PDF invoice. (We’ll guide you through.) Fees vary based on project scope.

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