Top News:
Reuters:
Mexican tycoon Slim not doubling NY Times stake -aide — * Washington Post looking to sell Newsweek — Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim is not doubling his stake in New York Times Co (NYT.N) or looking to acquire Newsweek magazine or silver miner Fresnillo, one of his close aides told Reuters on Friday.
RELATED:
New York Post:
Slim has his pickings — MEXICAN billionaire Carlos Slim is wheeling and dealing his way through the media world. — According to people familiar with the matter, Slim is sinking more money into The New York Times Co., doubling his current 7 percent stake, while also visiting the offices of Newsweek …
Bill Mickey / Folio:
Discover Magazine Up for Sale — First round of bids are due May 17. — Discover Magazine is on the block, FOLIO: has learned. The first round of bids are due Monday, May 17. — Discover Media LLC is backed by private equity firms WallerSutton and Sandler Capital Management.
Runnin' Scared:
Media Mogul James Dolan Elects to Use ‘Nuclear Option’ on Village Voice, Yet Again Pulling More Advertising Than Ever! — Back in March, a blog post we published regarding a potential media acquisition by Cablevision, MSG Entertainment, and Rainbow Media owner James Dolan …
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
On a Dramatic Afternoon for Dow, a Scramble to Cover the Story — Cable news anchors and financial Web sites struggled to keep up as the Dow fell nearly 1,000 points and then mostly rebounded in a matter of minutes Thursday afternoon. — As my colleague David Carr put it just now …
Discussion:
Felix Salmon, The Wire, TechCrunch, Inside Cable News, TVNewser, VentureBeat and Talking Biz News
RELATED:
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
CBS Will Have Full Slate of Web Video on the iPad — CBS may have the most aggressive plans to enable viewers to watch web video on the iPad, but so far, that's all they are — plans. The broadcaster has made only a limited number of promotional clips available for viewing on the tablet device …
Discussion:
The TV Guy
Paul Bradshaw / Online Journalism Blog:
UK general election 2010 - online journalism is ordinary — Has online journalism become ordinary? Are the approaches starting to standardise? Little has stood out in the online journalism coverage of this election - the innovation of previous years has been replaced by consolidation.
Jolie O'Dell / Mashable!:
Wikipedia Now Lets You Order Printed Books — Wikipedia's launching a new feature for English readers: The ability to create custom books from Wikipedia's huge bank of free content. Because of the way Wikipedia's images and copy are licensed, they're free for anyone to access, use and share in this way.
Discussion:
Lost Remote
Alissa Walker / Fast Company:
Theme Announced for 48 Hour Magazine, Over 6,000 Contributors Have Two Days to “Hustle” — That sound you hear, of thousands of writers, designers and photographers banging their heads against the wall to the beat of a ticking clock? That's the sound of 48 Hour Magazine …
Felix Gillette / New York Observer:
Rachel Maddow Touts the ‘The Maddow Blog’ — “I think a lot of times the blog is better than the show,” said Rachel Maddow. — It was Thursday afternoon, and Ms. Maddow was on the phone with Media Mob talking about her team's newly revamped platform, The Maddow Blog, which quietly launched a few months ago.
Business Wire:
The Washington Post Company Reports First Quarter Earnings — The Washington Post Company (WPO 476.00, -12.50, -2.56%) today reported net income available for common stock of $45.4 million ($4.91 per share) for its first quarter ended April 4, 2010, compared to a net loss available …
blogs.abcnews.com:
Four Journalists Banned From Gitmo Coverage for Outing an Interrogator — The Pentagon has barred four reporters from further reporting of the military commission proceedings at the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay because they published articles identifying a witness whose identity …
Jason Fry / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Why Twitter looks like a social network but feels like news media — Information Week posted an interesting account of an academic paper presented at the International World Wide Web Conference last month. The paper, written by four Korean researchers, analyzed 41.7 million Twitter user profiles …
Jesse Fruhwirth / Salt Lake City Weekly …:
Chronicle staff investigated for “PENIS” gag — FIRE, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, in conjunction with the Student Press Law Center, have written a letter to university administration in support of the Chrony 9. “These actions are unacceptable,” they write.
Discussion:
Romenesko, Mediaite, College Media Matters, Salt Lake Tribune, splc.org and Deseret News
Mary Elizabeth Williams / Salon:
The horror of NPR's copycat story — Did a “Morning Edition” segment lift its ideas from a satirical viral video? — On Wednesday, NPR's “Morning Edition” correspondent Beth Accomando did a humorous segment on a modern-day horror movie cliché called “The Cell Phone Always Dies First.”
Discussion:
mediabistro.com
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
Is Brightcove the Next Flash? — It was just a few years ago that Adobe's Flash revolutionized video publishing by enabling media companies to reach a vast number of consumers with a plugin that ensured a consistent rich media experience across multiple operating systems and browsers.
Paul J. Gough / Hollywood Reporter:
Networks banking on World Cup — Soccer tourney begins June 11 in South Africa — As the World Cup ads say, one game changes everything. — ESPN is counting on that maxim to justify its biggest marketing blitz to date for a single event, designed to position the sports nicher …
Today's Zaman Mobile Edition:
Al-Jazeera considering Turkish broadcast — Given the importance of Turkey for the Arab world, Al-Jazeera is giving serious thought to beginning Turkish-language broadcasts, Qatari Minister of Culture, Arts and Heritage Hamad Bin Abdulaziz al-Kawari has said.
Jason Chupick / PRNewser:
The FCC's Embedded Journalist Is Really a Spokesman — On Monday night the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) senior advisor to the chairman Steve Waldman tried out the agency's “Reboot” message on a tough crowd: regulation averse digerati from Silicon Alley.
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
HBO on Your iPad? There Won't Be an App for That (For a While). — Wouldn't it be awesome if you could buy a subscription to HBO without having to pay for cable? You could just beam the shows straight to your laptop or iPad or whatever. — Not going to happen. At least not anytime soon, says Jeff Bewkes.
Michael Miner / Chicago Reader:
The Sun-Times Preserves its Photo Archive by Selling It — Is the Sun-Times selling off its heritage at garage sale prices? The other day eBay put up for auction an item from the paper's archives described as “Original Photo 1913 Thomas Edison Family NICE!!!” Bidding started at $10 and ended four days later at $27.
Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson / Financial Times:
ProPublica chief aims to make a splash — When ProPublica, a non-profit investigative journalism start-up, was named among the Pulitzer prize winners last month, its acceptance by the editorial elite symbolised just how much online news operations are shaking up the US news establishment.
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk