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4:55 PM ET, May 10, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Nat Ives / AdAge:
Magazines' Pitch to Marketers: Our Ads Will Work — We Promise  —  Time Inc. Works With Starcom MediaVest to Guarantee Performance Results, or Run Make-Good Advertising  —  NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Magazines have always promised their advertisers a certain number of paying readers.
David Carr / New York Times:
The Media Equation: Reuters Insider, Like YouTube for Traders  —  For half an hour last Thursday afternoon, CNBC was the most exciting place on television.  Watching Erin Burnett and Jim Cramer try not to freak out — they acquitted themselves nicely — while the market tumbled like a drunken rag doll …
RELATED:
Russell Adams / Wall Street Journal:
Thomson Reuters to Add Videos
Discussion: New York Magazine
Evan Smith / The Texas Tribune:
T-Squared: The Six-Month Stats  —  Last week we celebrated our six-month birthday (it's not too late to send a card — or a gift).  It seems like only yesterday, blah, blah, cliché, blah — but, actually, it does seem like only yesterday that the Trib went live, even if doesn't feel like it (ow, my aching lack of sleep).
Discussion: Romenesko, eMedia Vitals and Fitz & Jen
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Media Notes: one editor's balancing act on the high wire of modern journalism  —  Rupert Murdoch insisted that the Wall Street Journal delay publishing the news that he had just fired its top editor.  —  “Tell them to hold it until we have a signed deal,” Murdoch told a top aide.
Discussion: Romenesko
Mike Shields / Mediaweek:
Huffington Post Gets Down to Business  —  The Huffington Post has enjoyed meteoric traffic growth since launching five years ago, and buzz to match.  Now it's time for the site's business side to catch up.  —  Industry veteran Greg Coleman, who became the site's chief revenue officer last September …
David Kaplan / paidContent:
EW Scripps Classified Declines Slow; Online-Only Ad Revs Soar  —  Like most newspaper companies, EW Scripps (NYSE: SSP) is seeing a hint of light at the end of the tunnel.  Thanks to cost-cutting efforts, the Cincinnati-based company slimmed its net losses to $880,000 ($.02 cents a share …
Brian Steinberg / AdAge:
Viewer-Engagement Rankings Signal Change for TV Industry  —  So Many Viewing Options Make Determining Which Shows Drive Fans' Interest More Important  —  NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Imagine a day when the top 10 TV shows include cult hits such as “Chuck,” “Better Off Ted” and “Heroes,” …
Discussion: NewTeeVee and Company Town
Bloomberg:
Advertising Rebound Means CBS, News Corp. Weigh Dividends  —  News Corp., CBS Corp. and Viacom Inc. are weighing dividend increases or share buybacks as an advertising rebound spurs cash flow, after media companies cut back during the U.S. recession.  —  CBS may boost its quarterly dividend 60 percent …
Laura McGann / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Forbes new tool tracks advertisers' corporate reputation  —  Get past advertising.  It's a commodity — and who wants to buy a commodity?  But a service — that's a different story.  —  That's how Bruce Rogers, chief brand officer for Forbes, says the magazine is thinking these days.
Hitsville:
The case against non-profit news sites  —  It's understandable that journalists shocked at the financial state of their industry would at some point think about a non-profit business model.  —  Behind the cynicism of most reporters lies a romantic streak, for one.
Discussion: Runnin' Scared
JSOnline:
Instant replay: Alleged yo-yo champ dupes TV shows  —  Kenny Strasser, who either lives in Antigo or Neenah or maybe somewhere else, says he a yo-yo champion, loves talking to schoolchildren and wants to save the Earth.  —  He's been divorced twice, doesn't have any kids, and has personal issues with members of his family.
Discussion: Deadspin
Zeke Turner / New York Observer:
‘48 Hour Magazine’: A Successful Time-Trial for Magazines  —  A small team of writers, editors, designers and programmers spent the weekend in Mother Jones' offices in San Francisco attempting to bring the magazine industry up to speed by producing an issue start-to-finish in 48 hours.
Discussion: Romenesko, Digits and National Media
Felix Salmon / New York Times:
Op-Ed Contributor: A Market for Movies  —  IN the 1950s, onion growers were often shocked at the low prices they were getting.  Casting around for a villain to blame, they alighted on derivatives traders, and they persuaded Congress to ban any futures trading in onions.
 
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 More News: 
Dan Gillmor / Mediactive:
Why I'm Going to Publish the Mediactive Book with Lulu
Discussion: Joho the Blog
Ed Pilkington / Guardian:
‘Rupert will do anything’  —  The acerbic Vanity Fair columnist …
Jason Fell / Folio:
SI Digital Edit Packages Fuel Revenue, Traffic Growth
Alex Ben Block / Hollywood Reporter:
Cable industry to talk convergence at confab
Nikki Finke / Deadline.com:
CNN: Is This China's Harvey Weinstein?
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
How a Young Kara Swisher Got Her Big Break at the Washington Post
 Earlier Picks: 
mUmBRELLA:
Google changes mean brands need to increase focus on content
Peter Preston / Guardian:
Will Lewis fell into the gap between Euston and Victoria
Asylum:
An Open Letter to Magazines (From the Internet)
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
Profitable Long Form Journalism
Discussion: Editors Weblog
 

 
From Techmeme:

Jason Schreier / Bloomberg:
Sources: Microsoft plans more cuts after closing several game studios, as the massive Activision acquisition has ramped up scrutiny on the Xbox division

Dallin Grimm / Tom's Hardware:
Some Stack Overflow users say their account was suspended after they attempted to alter their posts in protest of its OpenAI partnership to supply data for AI

Mark Gurman / Bloomberg:
A look at potential successors to Tim Cook; sources say Apple's hardware engineering chief John Ternus is the most likely long-term successor

 
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