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Cracked was founded as a magazine in 1958.[sup]
[7][/sup][sup]
[8][/sup] In early 2005, then
Cracked owner
Dick Kulpa sold the magazine to a group of investors who announced plans to revive a print version of
Cracked with a new editorial focus and redesign.[sup]
[9][/sup]
In October 2005, Cracked.com launched as a separate website under editor-in-chief Jack O'Brien, a former
ABC News producer.[sup]
[10][/sup][sup]
[11][/sup][sup]
[12][/sup][sup]
[13][/sup] Although the magazine folded soon after launch, the Cracked website gained popularity and was purchased by
Demand Media in June 2007, setting off Cracked's rapid growth period.[sup]
[5][/sup][sup]
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[15][/sup]
In 2007, Cracked had a few hundred thousand unique users per month and 3 to 4 million page views.[sup]
[5][/sup] The site fit well within Demand Media's network, with Jack O’Brien noting "They understand the web, and they made us nail down a voice".[sup]
[16][/sup] The editorial staff includes original editor-in-chief Jack O’Brien, Jason Pargin (under his pen name,
David Wong), who was added as an associate editor later in 2006, and Oren Katzeff who became Cracked.com's General Manager in November 2007 after running business development for
Yahoo Media Group.[sup]
[4][/sup][sup]
[17][/sup] Cracked.com publishes 2–4 articles daily (2,000 – 3,000 words each), along with video content, short-form content, and contests. The feature articles are the most popular, usually pulling in around 1 million views in their first week.[sup]
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[19][/sup]
In 2010, Cracked.com made an
iPad app available.[sup]
[20][/sup][sup]
[21][/sup] The app allows users to browse Cracked's articles, videos, and contests on the iPad.[sup]
[22][/sup] The app's landing page looks similar to Cracked's break room, with a soda machine, bar stools and a table.[sup]
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[22][/sup]
In 2010, Cracked drew over 1 billion
page views.[sup]
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[24][/sup][sup]
[25][/sup] By 2012, Jack O'Brien reported over 300 million page views in February and 7.3 million
unique monthly users, making it the most visited humor site in the world, ahead of
The Onion,
CollegeHumor, and
Funny or Die.[sup]
[5][/sup][sup]
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[16][/sup]
Writer
Daniel O'Brien was questioned by the FBI and United States Secret Service after writing an article titled "How to Kidnap the President's Daughter".[sup]
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[27][/sup]
In November 2013, the Cracked web site was hacked and was unwittingly delivering malware to site visitors. The hackers injected javascript that caused malicious software to be distributed to page viewers.[sup]
[28][/sup]
On April 12, 2016, Cracked was purchased by the
E. W. Scripps Company for $39 million.[sup]
[29][/sup]
In June 2017, Jack O'Brien stepped down from his position as editor-in-chief and left Cracked to build up the new comedy podcasting division at
HowStuffWorks.[sup]
[30][/sup][sup]
[31][/sup]
In October 2017, Soren Bowie left Cracked to become a writer on
American Dad!, while
Michael Swaim left Cracked to pursue other interests.
On December 4, 2017, E. W. Scripps laid off 25 staff members from the website, including
Daniel O'Brien, Cody Johnston, and the entire video team, in an effort to cut costs.[sup]
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On September 10, 2019, Cracked was acquired by Literally Media, home to KnowYourMeme, Cheezburger, and eBaum's World.