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5:05 PM ET, April 23, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Stephanie Clifford / New York Times:
Glamour Named Magazine of the Year  —  Glamour took the top honor at the National Magazine Awards on Thursday, winning in a new category called Magazine of the Year that awards both print and digital efforts.  —  The annual awards, given by the American Society of Magazine Editors, are considered the central awards in the industry.
RELATED:
Gillian Reagan / The Wire:
Glamour, ‘Magazine Of The Year,’ Got $54.4 Million In Ad Revenue In 2010  —  The American Society of Magazine Editors named the winners of their National Magazine Awards — also known as the Oscars for glossy prints — during a glitzy ceremony in New York last night.
Discussion: AdAge, New York Observer and Gawker
Elva Ramirez / Speakeasy:
Anna Wintour on the Web, Vogue's Future, and the iPad
Discussion: Gawker and WWD
Scott James / Bay Area:
The Brave Online World of Linking, Borrowing and Attributing (or Not)  —  This week's column is about former Vice President Al Gore and his cable channel Current TV, which were taken to court in San Francisco for using an Orinda photographer's work without permission or payment.
RELATED:
Scott James / New York Times:
A Court Victory Al Gore May Not Want to Advertise  —  Courts have not always sided with Al Gore, but his interests have prevailed in a San Francisco case involving a work of art whose creator claimed it had been misappropriated by Mr. Gore's cable television channel, Current TV.
Discussion: FishbowlLA
Alfred Hermida / Reportr.net:
NowPublic sacks most of its staff  —  Some bad news from the participatory journalism start-up NowPublic, based in Vancouver.  —  I've heard that the site had laid off most of its staff - 8 out of its team of 11 - and could likely be shutting down.  (See update below: NowPublic denies it is closed)
RELATED:
David Kaplan / paidContent:
NowPublic Lays Off Staff, Citing Acquisition; Vows To Rebuild  —  Citizen-J site NowPublic has laid off several members of its dozen-person staff, paidContent has been told, confirming portions of an earlier post by Reportr.net.  In an e-mail message to paidContent, NowPublic's founder Leonard Brody …
Discussion: Reportr.net
James Poniewozik / Time:
Can the CNN-ter Hold?  —  The evening of Easter Sunday, a 7.2-magnitude earthquake hit Baja California.  At 8 p.m. E.T., CNN had live coverage.  MSNBC was running a special, Why Planes Crash.  Fox News had host, preacher and former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee talking about God …
Discussion: Tuned In and TVNewser
Dan Gillmor / Mediactive:
Washington Post and NPR: Yes, Apple Can Block Their iPad Journalism  —  A few days ago, following up on questions I've asked a number of other news organizations about their relationships with Apple, the Washington Post's Rob Pegoraro a query to his bosses — and, unlike me with any traditional news company …
RELATED:
Rob Pegoraro / Washington Post:   App rejected? There's a rule for that.
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
Businessweek fires back at Fortune editor in mag rivalry  —  In talking up yesterday's launch of Bloomberg Businessweek, top executives boasted that the new-and-improved magazine would be the “most influential” among its competitors, and that rival Fortune “has moved away from core business coverage.”
Discussion: The Wire and Romenesko
RELATED:
Katie Benner / Fortune:
Bloomberg's ambition … (Fortune) — BusinessWeek relaunches …
Discussion: Yahoo! News and paidContent
Ken Doctor / Newsonomics:
Happy Birthday, HuffPo.  (Hint: Give Money)  —  Huffington Post is an impressive 5-year-old, ahead of its class, as it approaches its May 9th birthday.  It seems like yesterday that it broke into the top 25 news rankings and now it has landed in the top 10.
Discussion: Silicon Alley Insider
RELATED:
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Newsonomics of HuffPo's pinball wizardry
Discussion: Editors Weblog and Media Decoder
Chris Treadaway / ReadWriteWeb:
Why Newspapers Need to Heed Facebook, Now  —  Given Mark Zuckerberg's announcements at the Facebook F8 conference, one thing is certain: newspapers can no longer ignore Facebook's impact and reach.  Whereas publishers continue to scapegoat Google for many of their current troubles, they should be equally, if not more, wary of Facebook.
Gavin O'Malley / MediaPost:
Report: Pre-Roll Still Controls Ad Budgets  —  Nearly all ad executives and media buyers plan to increase spending on online video this year, according to new research from branded video ad network BrightRoll.  Indeed, 94% of respondents said they plan to increase their spending on video — up from 87% last year.
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
YouTube Video Rental Store Now Open  —  YouTube has quietly begun offering a variety of movies and TV episodes available for rental at youtube.com/store.  After experimenting with $5 rentals of Sundance Film Festival movies this January, the site is now offering 48 hour rentals mostly between 99 cents and $3.99.
Laurie Sullivan / MediaPost:
How Nickelodeon Moved To A One-Brand Strategy  —  Branding in the digital age has become painful for aging companies, especially when brands give birth to mini brands without closely tying together the two.  It worked for Apple early on, for example.  The parent, more than 30 years old, spawned iPad and iPod.
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
GMG Names Finance Chief Miller Interim CEO  —  Guardian Media Group is putting a numbers guy in charge, at least for the time being, in place of outgoing veteran Carolyn McCall.  —  Chief financial officer Andrew Miller will be “interim chief executive” from July 1, following McCall's exit to easyJet at June's end.
Discussion: Press Gazette and Guardian
Marc Graser / Variety:
Disney drawing ‘Monsters Inc.’ sequel  —  Studio also sets release date for Pixar's ‘Brave’  —  Disney is getting animated in 2012.  —  Studio has dated Pixar's “Brave” for June 15, 2012 while also confirming a sequel to “Monsters Inc.,” which will be released on Nov. 16, 2012.
Media Week:
‘Old’ media reasserts supremacy as election battle heats up  —  As the election campaigns reach fever pitch, Stephen Armstrong reports how traditional media such as TV and posters are replacing online mashups as the political parties' battlegrounds of choice
Discussion: Brand Republic
Jim O'Neill / FierceOnlineVideo:
Level 3 lands ABC News deal  —  Chalk one up for Broomfield, Colo.-based Level 3 Communications .  (NASDAQ: LVLT), which has announced that ABC has tapped it to help the broadcaster move masses of video between its New York, Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles ABC News locations across its Tier 1 backbone.
Discussion: FierceTelecom
Richard Lea / Guardian:
Author admits poison pen reviews  —  After Amazon notices rubbishing peers' work were spotted, esteemed Russianist's lawyers initially denied all connection, then said his wife had written them.  He has now conceded the ‘foolish errors’ were his own  —  After threatening colleagues …
Los Angeles Times:
Threat against ‘South Park’ creators highlights dilemma for media companies  —  Comedy Central bleeped out all references to the prophet Muhammad in the show after he was depicted dressed as a bear.  The show's creators disagreed strongly with the decision.
Discussion: The Big Picture
Neely Tucker / Washington Post:
How determined is Allbritton's D.C. news Web site to succeed?  Well, that's TBD.  —  Media Wonk Alert!  —  The much-anticipated local news Web venture by Allbritton Communications (the folks who brought you Politico) has, after months of internal debate, finally been named.  —  It is TBD.com.
Robert Rich / online.journalism.utexas.edu:
The Keynote: Steven Kydd of Demand Media  —  This year's keynote speech was without a doubt one of the most anticipated in the event's 11 year history.  Steven Kydd of Demand Media presented an engaging speech to kick off the events, and impressively, mentioned the controversy surrounding the company first.
 
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 More News: 
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Shepard Fairey: AP Suit Driven By ‘Crumbling Business Model’; …
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Journalism's tea party express
Roben Farzad / Business Week:
Is the Times Ready for a Newspaper War?
Discussion: Mother Jones and mediabistro.com
Jon Friedman / MarketWatch:
Roethlisberger poses a challenge for media
Cory Doctorow / Boing Boing:
India's copyright bill gets it right
Discussion: Techdirt
Foster Kamer / Runnin' Scared:
Andrew Breitbart vs. Oh No They Didn't: A Media Spat with Epic Potential
David Cohen / WebNewser:
BUZZMEDIA Adds Two Former Editors in Chief
Discussion: PRNewser
Dave Itzkoff / ArtsBeat:
After ‘Office’ Hours, Mindy Kaling Writes a Book
Discussion: PopEater and New York Magazine
 Earlier Picks: 
Myglesias / Matthew Yglesias:
The Fifteen Minutes Problem
Discussion: rc3.org and New York Times
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Updated: Right Media's Bill Wise Leaving Yahoo
Discussion: Silicon Alley Insider
Laura Oliver / Journalism.co.uk:
Outsourcing photography - what cost to local news organisations?
Jeff Bercovici / DailyFinance:
Gawker Owner: Gizmodo's iPhone Scoop Didn't Make Me Money
James Poniewozik / Tuned In:
Biting the Hand: When Media Companies Attack (Themselves)
Kate Taylor / New York Times:
New York Public Library Sorts Books by Scanner
Discussion: The Book Bench
Dylan F. Tweney / Gadget Lab:
26 Percent of Wired's Mobile Traffic Comes From the iPad
Discussion: Poynter Online
 

 
From Techmeme:

Wall Street Journal:
Sources: T-Mobile's network was among the systems hacked by the China-linked Salt Typhoon group, and some foreign telecommunications firms were also compromised

Wall Street Journal:
Sources: ByteDance is valuing itself at about $300B as part of a recent buyback offer, one of its highest valuations ever

Gavin Anderegg / anderegg.ca:
Bluesky is working to become fully decentralized but it could take years amid financial concerns as it makes money only by selling domains for usernames

 
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