Top News:
BBC:
Times website to charge from June — The Times and Sunday Times newspapers will start charging to access their websites in June, owner News International (NI) has announced. — Users will pay £1 for a day's access and £2 for a week's subscription.
Discussion:
Guardian, paidContent, One Man & His Blog, Jon Slattery, Channel 4, Sky News, Freelance Unbound, THINQ.co.uk and John Rentoul
RELATED:
Elizabeth Barrett / Press Association:
Users to pay £2 a week to read Times online — Customers will be charged £2 a week to read The Times and The Sunday Times online from June, News International announced today. — Both titles will launch new websites in early May, separating their digital presence …
Discussion:
The Next Web
Peter Kirwan / Wired.co.uk:
Why Lebedev's Indy should go digital — On current circulation trends, the last printed newspaper in America will be sold during early 2043. — Given our national love affair with newsprint, extinction might take longer in the UK. But it seems fair to predict that News Corporation …
RELATED:
Daniel Finkelstein / Times of London:
Former KGB spy Alexander Lebedev buys Independent for £1
Former KGB spy Alexander Lebedev buys Independent for £1
Discussion:
Associated Press
Wall Street Journal:
Magazines' New Barker: iPad — Advertisers Gather Around as Publishers Tout Tablet Device's Bells and Whistles — A laundry list of open questions about Apple's iPad isn't keeping magazine publishers and advertisers from lining up for the launch of the tablet computer next week.
RELATED:
Shira Ovide / Digits:
Time's Managing Editor: iPad Content Awaits ‘Its Orson Welles’ — “I was very keen on being present at the creation.” — That's Richard Stengel, managing editor of Time magazine, excitedly talking about the iPad version he expects to roll out at or shortly after the hotly anticipated launch of the tablet computer on April 3.
Discussion:
MinOnline
Jim Romenesko / Romenesko:
Dozier leaves CBS News to become AP's intelligence reporter — AP Washington Bureau Chief Ron Fournier's memo — I'm pleased to announce the AP's new intelligence reporter: Kimberly Dozier. — You may know Kim as the Middle East correspondent for CBS News, where she earned a reputation …
Roc / Media is a Plural:
Union Busting, Bloomberg Sale Looming at ABC News? — Turmoil continues at troubled ABC News. Morale among employees was already low after president David Westin's recent announcement that their ranks are to be decimated as part of a “new digital day.” — It plunged even further following …
RELATED:
Michael Schneider / On The Air:
Ex-ABC correspondent Rooney: Massive cuts “will have unintended consequences”
Ex-ABC correspondent Rooney: Massive cuts “will have unintended consequences”
Discussion:
LA Observed
PATRICK GOLDSTEIN / The Big Picture:
Variety to studios: Stop giving scoops to the competition! — Variety has been making a lot of news lately. Unfortunately, the news has been pretty much all bad. — In case you've just tuned in, the venerable trade paper has suffered one black eye after another in recent weeks.
Doree Shafrir / Gawker:
How the Michelle ‘Bombshell’ McGee Story Got Made — Everyone was shocked when, last week, In Touch published a cover story about Jesse James' mistress Michelle “Bombshell” McGee. The surprise wasn't that James was having affairs, but that In Touch had gotten the story—and gotten it right.
Michael Fox / 22 Michaels:
The incredible power of a 16 year old video blogger — Well, it's taken me a week to think through all the ramifications of this and put it into a blog post, but last week was the best ever for Shoes of Prey by a large order of magnitude, and it's all thanks to this video by a 16 year old YouTuber, Juicystar07 aka Blair Fowler.
Ryan Tate / Gawker:
The Photo Tool That Could Shake Up Online Publishing — Here's an amazing demo of the “content-aware fill” tool that's apparently forthcoming in Photoshop CS5. The tool makes it easy to delete objects from a complex photo, without any trace they ever existed. The ramifications for internet publishing are frightening.
Discussion:
Vanity Fair
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
Jimmy Dolan Pulls Out of Village Voice After Dick Joke, Or The Most Expensive Blog Post of All Time — We now know the yearly value of a dick joke: $20,800. A company owned by Jimmy Dolan, Cablevision CEO and new owner of Gothamist, has pulled a $400/week ad from the Village Voice after it joked about his penis.
Will Richmond / VideoNuze.com:
Here's How Google TV Will Work - And What It Might Mean — Last week, the NY Times shared some details of “Google TV,” the new set-top box Google is developing in partnership with Intel and Sony. The article provided a good outline, and now, based on additional information I've gathered …
Dylan Stableford / The Wrap:
TMZ Insider Sues Over Drugs, Alcohol in Newsroom — A former TMZ producer has filed a lawsuit against the site, claiming he was fired for complaining about alcohol and drug use by other staffers on the job after he returned from a medical leave for depression.
Alex Weprin / Broadcasting & Cable:
Spike Launching UFC Destination Site — UltimateFighter.com will feature archive of all episodes and fights from Spike show, additional content — MTV Networks-owned Spike TV is expanding its relationship with the UFC, creating a branded destination site for avid fans of mixed martial arts.
Xiao Qiang / chinadigitaltimes.net:
The Ministry of Truth Limits Reporting on Google in China 03/23/10 (Updated) — In China, several political bodies are in charge of Internet content control. At the highest level, there is the Central Propaganda Department, which ensures that media and cultural content follows the official line as mandated by the CCP.
James Hibberd / Hollywood Reporter:
Bunim-Murray acquired by France's Banijay — Reality hitmaker will expand in international marketplace — French production company Banijay Entertainment is acquiring reality hitmakers Bunim-Murray Prods., whose credits include “The Real World” and “Keeping Up With the Kardashians.”