Until March of this year, Scott Sassa was one of the most influential media executives in the U.S.
As president of entertainment and syndication at Hearst (it owns Cosmopolitan, among other titles), he cut deals with ESPN and Lifetime, and received a reported $6 million salary. He was a longtime friend of the Kardashian family.
Sassa's most recent success was "The Bible," a joint project with Survivor's Mark Burnett for The History Channel that got record ratings. He was the executive producer of the show, which was so popular that its audience rivaled that of AMC's The Walking Dead in size.
The two-hour conclusion of "The Bible" on Easter Sunday should have been Sassa's moment of triumph.
Instead, he found himself unemployed, spending time with his kids on vacation in Hawaii, wondering how he can salvage his career after the boyfriend of an escort sent Hearst's legal department copies of sexy text messages the woman and Sassa had exchanged.
A source sent copies of those texts to Business Insider, along with emails exchanged between the boyfriend and Hearst. The messages have circulated among several Hearst executives. The texts are sexually graphic, and discussed drugs. They are not safe to be read aloud at work.
But they aren't unusual.
Sexting is so common as to be mainstream, and it sometimes seems as if everybody does it. Samsung has even made a funny commercial about sex-texting. While sexting feels intimate and exciting to those exchanging the messages, what is often forgotten is that texts have only limited privacy protections. They can be copied and forwarded any number of ways. Sassa's texts, for instance, were not passed on by him or the woman to any third party. Rather, they were discovered by her disgruntled boyfriend — a man who may also have been her "business manager" — who became annoyed at the relationship between the two.
This, then, is a cautionary tale about the lack of privacy in the digital age.
The texts do not show that Sassa ever met the woman, an escort going by the name "Kira" who worked for the Friends of Kari Ann web site in the Los Angeles area.
They are simply messages between two consenting adults, conducted in private. Neither Sassa nor the woman have been accused of any wrongdoing. They are both single. In many ways, the messages were none of Hearst's business — it wasn't even a workday when Sassa sent them.
When reached, Sassa told Business Insider, "I just want to put this behind me."
"Kira" did not return a message requesting comment. The boyfriend, who does business under the name Ben Free, declined to talk on the record, although he did confirm the messages were genuine, and that he had an extensive criminal record which includes a conviction for assault. Three other sources familiar with the messages also confirmed to BI that the messages were Sassa's.
Unsurprisingly, few people were willing to talk to us on the record about Sassa's fall.
But speaking privately, those who knew him describe a driven, intense executive who is a great father to his children. Some in the media business have expressed sympathy for him. After all, would anyone want the messages they've sent to lovers exposed to their employers? Expect Sassa, after a brief break, to come back to the business in a big way — we're told his phone is ringing off the hook with offers.
"He was the smartest, most forward-thinking media executive I ever worked with," said one colleague. "He was taking Hearst into the 21st Century."
Hearst, however, is a conservative company. "Everybody on the top floor is married with a wife and 2.5 kids and a picket fence," a source says. Sassa was single.
Three female sources told us that they had nothing but respect for Sassa, that they felt the texts were an aberration and not reflective of his day-to-day dealings with women. They noted that the texts occurred on Christmas Day, when Sassa — who lives in New York — was stuck in a Los Angeles hotel room without his family. "Here's a guy who was displaced around the holidays, who was kind of lonely," one told us.
By mid-March, The New York Post reported that Sassa was the victim of an extortion plot involving the messages, and on March 13 he resigned his position. Hearst likely gave him a large severance package.
The following slides explain how it happened.
They contain texts that use highly pornographic language and references to illegal drugs. They will likely be offensive to many readers.
It's Christmas Day in 2012, and Sassa texts "Kira," to see if she will meet him. The name "Kari Ann" refers to Friends of Kari Ann, an escort service. Kira sends him a photo of herself. (A colleague of Sassa's tells us he was on his own for the holiday, and was probably feeling sad because of it. "This is not what he does on a regular basis," the source says.)
The photo is Kira's publicity shot from the web site.
Sassa tries to persuade Kira to meet him by promising her "Molly," a reference to an ecstacy-like drug called MDMA. He's willing to pay $1,000 for two hours of her time.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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