Top News:
Felix Salmon:
The economics of non-profit newspapers — Alan Mutter is a genuine expert on newspaper economics, which is one reason why his bizarre blog entry today on the economics of non-profit newspapers is so puzzling. This has to be one of the most innumerate things he's ever written:
Discussion:
Romenesko
RELATED:
Newsosaur / Reflections of a Newsosaur:
Non-profits can't possibly save the news — An amazing number of smart and sophisticated people continue to harbor the fantasy that philanthropic contributions can take over funding journalism from the media companies that traditionally have supported the press.
David Carr / Media Decoder:
The Financial Times: A Newspaper With Good Business News — About Itself — On Monday, Decoder came across a rare site in the wilds of Manhattan: a happy publishing executive. — John Ridding is the chief executive of The Financial Times, a global business newspaper based in London.
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Sree Sreenivasan / DNAinfo.com:
Lessons from A Week Without Newspapers
Bill Carter / New York Times:
CNN Fails to Stop Fall in Ratings — CNN continued what has become a precipitous decline in ratings for its prime-time programs in the first quarter of 2010, with its main hosts losing almost half their viewers in a year. — The trend in news ratings for the first three months of this year …
Foster Kamer / Runnin' Scared:
Blodget and Salmon on Blodget vs. Salmon: The Last Word — Last week, a war of words broke out between two fairly notable New York media presences. It was started after an editor was fired last week, the news of which we broke here. And we thought we'd try to end it here, too, by speaking with both about the spat.
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Christopher Conklin / The Awl:
How Web Writers Get Held Responsible for the Lawyers, the Sales Guys and Even the Coffeemaker — After Henry Blodget fired editor John Carney from his role as the editor of Clusterstock last week, some clearly felt that Blodget, the Business Insider cofounder and CEO, owed an explanation.
Stop / Twitter Blog:
Tweaking the Twitter homepage — Twitter's homepage is a work-in-progress. Today, we're testing a new design that bubbles up more of the information flowing through Twitter. This builds on a series of changes starting last year when we redesigned the homepage to make search and trending topics …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, paidContent, 901am, VentureBeat, Search Engine Land, Social Media Today, ReadWriteWeb and Silicon Alley Insider
J. David Goodman / City Room:
Ads for Community Papers, but Are They Local? — An ad campaign promoting community papers displays images of failure with the tag line “Your Community Paper. Told Ya.” — The story of newspapers' woes is well known, and the news is almost continually dire.
Discussion:
Fitz & Jen
Mike Taylor / FishBowlNY:
A Conversation With Mark Coatney, the Man Behind Newsweek's Tumblr — One of the first major publications to make its presence felt on Tumblr, Newsweek has been one of the pioneers of the social-media/blogging site. Thanks in part to its highly personalized voice, Newsweek.tumblr.com has collected 6,000 followers.
Michael Calderone / Michael Calderone's Blog:
Time's Tumulty joins WaPo — Time magazine's Karen Tumulty will soon be joining The Washington Post as the paper's national political correspondent, according to a memo obtained by POLITICO. — Tumulty has spent the past 16 years at Time, writing cover stories and regularly contributing to the magazine's “Swampland” blog.
News & Tech:
Chicago Tribune turning old photos into new revenue stream — The Chicago Tribune is kicking off an effort to turn its dusty archived photographs into a shiny new revenue opportunity. — “The overall goal is to figure out how the company can monetize its resources that are currently archival in nature …
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
What does This American Life look like? A designer visualizes the radio — Most New Year's resolutions are as predictable as they are short-lived: Quit smoking. Lose weight. Be more patient. Stop procrastinating. Use the occasion of a sparkling new year to become happy of mind …
Tim Elfrink / Riptide 2.0:
More Gerald Posner Plagiarism in Miami Babylon, From New Times, PBS, and Many Others — Back on March 16, Riptide broke the news that South Beach-based author Gerald Posner's latest book, Miami Babylon, had stolen eight passages from Frank Owen's 2003 work Clubland.
Discussion:
Gawker
Mike Reynolds / Multichannel News:
Time Warner Cable Connects On YES's Live Streaming Service — MSO Becomes Fourth Affiliate For RSN's ‘Yankees On Yes Live Game Streaming’ In-Market Package — YES Network has found a fourth hitter for its “TV Everywhere” lineup of live streamed New York Yankees games: Time Warner Cable.
MediaShift:
Portability, Participation Rule for New Media Consumer — We're spoiled by technology. Today, we expect more from our media than we can get from print, radio or linear TV. — If you're like me — and, increasingly, evidence shows people are — you crave portability, fungibility …
Markus Goebel / TechCrunch Europe:
Europe's biggest publisher embraces the WePad — [Germany] Billed as an iPad competitor, the WePad is not vaporware, but is in fact, The Chosen One. At least, that's the view of some, who are hailing the WePad as the saviour of the German print publishing industry.
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Guardian ads poke fun at new Independent ownership — Masthead redrawn in Cyrillic-style type to point to paper's acquisition by Russian billionaire Alexander Lebedev — The Guardian is running an ad in media trade magazines this week questioning the editorial independence of the Independent under …
Jon Healey / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
Hollywood wins another lawsuit against a search engine — Chalk up another legal victory for the Motion Picture Assn. of America in its battle against websites that make it easier for people to find and download bootlegged Hollywood movies. Monday, a judge in London's High Court of Justice ruled …
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Daily Mail & General Trust reports display ad rise at national papers — Group that owns Daily Mail and about 100 regional titles says overall revenues fell 13% in five months to end of February — Daily Mail & General Trust has a reported a 13% fall in total revenues in the five months …
Discussion:
Press Gazette
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
GOOD Adds YouTube CEO Chad Hurley And Pepsi CMO Jill Beraud To Advisory Board — GOOD, the company behind the integrated media platform for “people who give a damn”, has added some serious weight to its leadership team with the addition of three high-profile advisors.
Discussion:
GOOD Inc
Paul Bradshaw / Online Journalism Blog:
“Follow, Then Filter”: from information stream to delta — A year or two ago, as Twitter and FriendFeed in turn made headlines, much was made of how we were increasingly consuming information as a stream. Last January I blogged along those lines on why and how I followed 2,500 people on Twitter - why?
Barbara Casassus / theBookseller.com:
French publisher Gallimard to sue Google — Gallimard and two other French publishers plan to sue Google for scanning books without prior permission. The move was announced at the Paris Book Fair by Gallimard chief executive Antoine Gallimard. — Gallimard told an audience at a conference …
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
A “reader affection” formula: Gawker creates a metric for branded traffic — Influence, engagement, impact: For goals that are, in journalism, kind of the whole point, they're notoriously difficult to quantify. How do you measure, measure a year, and so on.
Michael Learmonth / AdAge:
Hulu's a Towering Success — Just Not Financially — Web-Video Future Hinges on It Working Out Pay Model — NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Hulu is everyone's favorite provider of TV on the web, but it's facing an ideological battle over its future. On one side are its network backers, which would like Hulu to become a paid service.
New York Times:
CKX Inc., Owner of ‘American Idol,’ Planning a Sale — By BRIAN STELTER and MICHAEL J. de la MERCED — The “American Idol” television brand may soon be in the hands of private equity. — CKX Inc., which owns a majority stake in “Idol,” confirmed on Monday that it was discussing a sale of the company.