In the latest sign of editorial turbulence, the number two editor at the yet-to-relaunch Gawker is returning to Interview, the Andy Warhol-founded magazine that only emerged from bankruptcy in September.

Ben Barna, who had been reporting to Editor-in-Chief Dan Peres, opted to return to Interview a mere five months after he joined Gawker, which famously filed for bankruptcy in 2016 after a Florida jury ordered it to pay $115 million for publishing a Hulk Hogan sex tape.

Barna will be replaced by Nate Hopper, who is still listed as the ideas editor on Time magazine’s website. He also once worked at Esquire.

A spokeswoman for Gawker’s new parent company, Bustle Media, said Hopper started in the new role Wednesday. Bustle, owned by Bleacher Report founder Bryan Goldberg, bought Gawker out of bankruptcy in late 2018 for $1.35 million.

Barna’s departure is just the latest setback in the notoriously snarky website’s relaunch. Gawker’s only two full-time writers quit in January in protest of an executive who they said used anti-gay slurs and made derogatory comments about Asians and celebrities deemed to be overweight. The site is now slated for a relaunch in “fall 2019.”

Neither Barna nor Interview’s new president, Kelly Brant, returned calls seeking comment about his new role, which remains a mystery. Barna previously headed up digital operations for Interview.

Nick Denton’s Gawker Media originally included sites such as Deadspin and Gizmodo before being destroyed by Hogan, also known as Terry Bollea. Most of the company was sold to Univision for $135 million in 2016 as the Spanish network sought to diversify. That plan soon unraveled and it subsequently sold Gizmodo to Great Hill Partners, which renamed it G/O Media.