I was a big fan of Wirecutter in the early days, but the quality and coverage of their reviews has plummeted in recent years.<p>They try to update reviews periodically, but they're often missing the most recent products on the market. From their comparisons. Many of their conclusions seem to draw from testing performed many years ago.<p>Some of the best advice from Wirecutter comes, ironically, from the comment sections, where upset Wirecutter fans seem more interested in tracking down the best products than the site itself. Lately if I visit Wirecutter I scroll to the bottom and see if there are a lot of comments asking why a better product isn't included in the comparison.<p>I suppose it's not surprising to hear that NYTimes isn't putting much money into the company any more. Though I have to admit I was a bit shocked to see such a relatively large staff involved in this union given the state of their reviews.<p>Regardless, having the staff go on record that they don't like the Wirecutter and specifically asking the site's fanbase to <i>not</i> use the site feels like the death knell for the site, at least in its current incarnation.
I thought this was saying "please don't shop this Black Friday" lol.<p>They're saying "please don't use Wirecutter this BF".<p>I already don't, but I'll do my part and continue not to.<p>Edit: I read some of the testimony and I'm confused. For instance:<p>"I was excited to join Wirecutter as the Times announced a major DEI report and plan as central to its mission. The most powerful thing the Times and Wirecutter can do in the name of diversity and equity is to pay more and do away with NDAs."<p>Why is it "powerful", in the name of DEI, to pay this person more and help their future job prospects?<p>They already work for a massive and powerful corporation - it hardly helps DEI to give their well-paid workers another pay rise and revoke NDAs.
I’ve been “burned” by Wirecutter many a time. While they have the best presentation of any product review site, and I’m a huge fan of the quality of the NYT’s work in general despite being on the opposite end of their bias spectrum, the reality is the site is little more than a prettified Amazon referral link aggregator.<p>The expensive house fan I bought (and exchanged for a new one with the same issue) made a constant rumble noise that made it difficult to fall asleep to - my $15 Honeywell had no issues.<p>The router I bought started dropping connections within a year.<p>The wireless extender I tried was terrible and also constantly dropped connections and was overall poorly made (Wirecutter made no mention of the loud coil whine).<p>The air purifier I bought on their recommendation makes a loud noise any time the house gets below a certain temperature.<p>The surge protector I bought reeked of that cheap chemically plastic smell that was especially common about 10 years ago but still apparently exists today. No mention on WC.<p>All of these issues, by the way, are corroborated by various Amazon reviewers, as much as I hate to give them much credence.<p>After that I stopped visiting the site. If you look at any review category it’s glaringly obvious they appear to either be receiving kickbacks or are just entirely ignoring extremely common products for whatever reason (Armandhammer detergent not tested? P&G/Tide is thrilled at not having to have the extra competition, I’m sure)<p>So yeah, they have a very hip presentation geared towards a very particular demo, but everything is not as it seems.<p>So I encourage this boycott as well. Both for Wirecutter and Amazon.
The title is misleading if not outright incorrect. The Wirecutter <i>Union</i> is asking people to refrain from buying through Wirecutter in support of their walkout.
Cached versions as the site is down:<p>Google: <a href="https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:5SQssfWiVuUJ:https://www.wirecutterunion.com/+&cd=10&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us" rel="nofollow">https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:5SQssf...</a><p>Archive: <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20211109163041/https://www.wirecutterunion.com/" rel="nofollow">https://web.archive.org/web/20211109163041/https://www.wirec...</a>
Site is down and nothing about Black Friday on the Wirecutter.<p>Possibly related? Ask Wirecutter: How Do I Stop Wasting Money on Unnecessary Tech Upgrades?
<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/blog/ask-wirecutter-early-tech-adopter/" rel="nofollow">https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/blog/ask-wirecutter-early...</a>
What is going on here? And what is Wirecutter union? Also, is anyone else frustrated that Wirecutter went behind a paywall? I thought that the whole point was that they made their money off of affiliate marketing. I was happy to buy things through Wirecutter because they gave great advice and hey, I was going to buy it anyway. But the paywall thing I just do not get. I'm not buying things through the Wirecutter anymore and I don't recommend it either. I'm in tech and so of course random people ask me "which doodad should I buy?" Frequently. My answer used to be "Just get whatever the Wirecutter says, that's what I do." Now no more. It's even more stupid because I have a NYT subscription! But that's not enough?!
.5% wage increase with the past years' inflation is outright disrespectful. It's a clear and deliberate docking of their wages in a time where their profits are most likely soaring.<p>There's no excuse for this, NYT. Do better.
See also <a href="https://reddit.com/r/antiwork/comments/qp0vdq/please_take_thirty_seconds_to_read_this_may/" rel="nofollow">https://reddit.com/r/antiwork/comments/qp0vdq/please_take_th...</a>, a popular reddit movement calling for a ten-day strike starting on Black Friday.<p>Although I personally don’t support this, it’s interesting and I’m surprised this hasn’t been posted to HN yet.