After leaving
GQ, Brown launched his own company, I Feel Good, and subsequently acquired
Viz,
Fortean Times and
Bizarre magazines from John Brown Publishing for £6.4 million. He created the magazine
Jack in August 2002. IFG was sold to
Dennis Publishing for £5.1 million in 2003 after the company's annual losses doubled to £1.1 million and the film title
Hotdog was sold, having failed to reach break-even. Speaking in 2010, Brown said he had "made a lot of mistakes" at IFG and felt "a bit embarrassed about how little I had made of the opportunities I had created". In 2007, he was hired as editor-in-chief of the free-to-air TV channel
Sumo TV, saying he had plans to push the genre of "spectacular voyeurism". The channel was briefly moved into the Adult, Gaming and Dating categories before refocusing on content provided by
Psychic Television. After selling IFG, Brown worked across the media. On television he appeared with
Gok Wan in
Miss Naked Beauty and was a participant in Channel 4's
Extreme Detox. He also helped to create
Flipside TV and co-produced over 50 episodes before the show was bought for Channel 4 and then Paramount. Brown was appointed as consultant editor-in-chief at Sport Media Group, a part-time post, in November 2007. In January 2008,
Barry McIlheney was hired by Brown as the new editor-in-chief. The two men were responsible for a relaunch of the
Daily Sport and
Sunday Sport newspapers in April 2008. Brown also presented and co-produced
I Predict a Riot for
Bravo, a ten-part investigation into the history of civil disorder, and regularly appeared as a pundit on the BBC's art shows
Newsnight Review and
The Culture Show. In 2010 he oversaw the relaunch of the
Sky Sports Magazine. In May 2010, Brown launched the website
Sabotage Times to focus on music, sports, fashion, travel, TV and film. Since 2010, Brown has made frequent appearances in the media, both on the radio for
Talksport's show
The Warm Up, hosted by Brown,
Johnny Vaughan and Gavin Woods, and as a guest panellist on Alan Davies' show
As Yet Untitled, broadcast on
Dave. He is also an active business speaker and took the stage alongside figures such as
Kofi Annan and
Al Gore at the Leaders in London summit in 2007. In March 2019, Brown was appointed as editor-in-chief of
FourFourTwo magazine. In August 2019, he left
FourFourTwo after less than six months. It was later reported that he had made offensive remarks about the
Tottenham Hotspur player
Son Heung-min. In November 2024, Brown, along with the core team at
Loaded and outside observers, participated in the BBC
Arena documentary
Loaded: Lads, Mags and Mayhem, which was about the rise and cultural impact of
Loaded and its subsequent imitators. == References ==