Top News:
Andrew Rice / New York Times:
Putting a Price on Words — Last year, Sam Apple got the idea into his head that what the world needed was a new kind of newspaper. This was, to put it mildly, at odds with the consensus of the marketplace. At the time, several large media companies were in bankruptcy …
Charles V. Bagli / New York Times:
Condé Nast Considers Move to New W.T.C. Tower — The publishing giant Condé Nast has been talking to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey about moving to 1 World Trade Center when it is complete, a potential coup for the signature skyscraper rising from ground zero.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY, Crain's New York Business, MediaPost, Gawker, The Wire, New York Observer, Curbed NY, Gothamist, New York Magazine and WebNewser
Shira Ovide / Wall Street Journal:
Haim Saban Plans ‘Serious Look’ at Newsweek — Billionaire media investor Haim Saban said Wednesday he's planning to “take a serious look” at Newsweek magazine, which is on the auction block. — Mr. Saban said Don Graham, chairman of Newsweek parent company Washington Post Co. …
Discussion:
paidContent, FishbowlNY, Romenesko, Gawker, The Wire, mediabistro.com, New York Magazine, New York Observer, Reuters, Geekosystem and Guardian
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
You're Welcome, You Bastards — A week ago we posted two excerpts from Fortune columnist David Kirkpatrick's new book The Facebook Effect. We're big fans of Kirkpatrick and have been following his book progress since last year. When Fortune's PR department called to ask us to print the excerpts, we quickly agreed.
Ian Burrell / The Independent:
Will Rupert Murdoch's plans to charge for access to his websites pay off? — Next week Rupert Murdoch introduces a charge for access to the websites of his best-known news titles. Will his latest gamble pay off? — The big reveal comes next week. We'll have a better idea then whether …
iab.net:
Internet Advertising Revenues Hit $5.9 Billion in Q1 '10, Highest First-Quarter Revenue Level On Record — 7.5% Year-Over-Year Increase a Bright Spot in Marketing & Advertising Media NEW YORK, NY (May 13, 2009) — Internet advertising revenues in the U.S. hit $5.9 billion for the first quarter of 2010 …
Discussion:
MediaMemo, paidContent, New York Observer, Media Decoder, John Battelle's Searchblog, TechCrunch and TechFlash
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
Hulu: HTML5 Isn't Ready for Prime Time — UPDATED: Hulu rolled out a number of updates to its video player today, including making it bigger, adding adaptive bitrate streaming, improving content recommendations and enabling users to receive more personalized ads.
Marisa Guthrie / Broadcasting & Cable:
Cable Show 2010: TV Everywhere, Money Not So Much — Media executives rehash perennial concerns about financial viability of multiplatform distribution — Moderated by former FCC chairman Michael Powell, who has segued from the federal payroll to Providence Equity Partners …
Discussion:
paidContent, Multichannel, Media Buyer Planner, TVNewser, MediaPost, WebNewser and Beet.TV
RELATED:
Alex Ben Block / Hollywood Reporter:
Moguls: Models matter most
Steve Donohue / Light Reading:
Comcast CEO Dismisses Cord-Cutting Trend
Stephanie Clifford / New York Times:
A Digital Boot Camp to Groom Talent for Agencies — WHEN she founded the digital ad agency Exopolis nine years ago, Kat Egan wasn't worried about finding good talent. Although the Internet was young, she figured trained technologists would soon be pelting her with résumés.
Ctouhey / TBD:
We're Crowdsourcing Plans for TBD — While we were working on a name for our new project (we settled on TBD), we used a lot of different names to refer to it, including, well, TBD, nonameyet, and many others. — At one point, a tweep suggested that we crowdsource the name, seeking suggestions on Twitter.
Discussion:
Zombie Journalism
Joe Pompeo / The Wire:
Forbes Staffers Worry About Another Huge Shakeup And Layoffs — Is there more bad news brewing at Forbes? — We've been hearing from insiders that there are rumors of another potential shake-up at the magazine — that more layoffs are coming, this time including editors and not just the rank-and-file.
Peter Lauria / The Daily Beast:
Sony's Family Saga — Hungry Beast Giving Beast Women in the World — Blogs and Stories — A succession battle is brewing at the second-largest music company in the world, as Sir Howard Stringer must choose between the head of RCA—and his own brother.
Discussion:
The Daily Beast
Joshua Topolsky / Engadget:
Adobe targets Apple in ad campaign launched today, publishes open letter from founders — If you're reading Engadget today (and let's be honest, you're reading it right now), then you might have noticed that Adobe has launched a pretty full-force campaign to call out Apple on its anti-Flash mission.
Tim Elfrink / Riptide 2.0:
Gerald Posner Hires Rush to Judgment Author Mark Lane in Plagiarism Case — Gerald Posner, Miami Beach author and admitted plagiarist, announced today that he's hired a lawyer to defend him against Miami New Times' stories about his literary thefts. — Posner's own best-seller and Pulitzer finalist …
Laura Oliver / Journalism.co.uk:
Private Eye backs hyperlocal Hackney newspaper in row with council — Private Eye plans to republish audio clips of a phone call that are at the centre of a dispute between Hackney council and independent community newspaper the Hackney Citizen. — The Eye will host the clips as an act …
Discussion:
Hackney Citizen
Jason Fry / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Why the biggest competitor to iPad news apps may be a familiar icon — Once we got done making jokes about the name, one of the more amusing aspects of the iPad's launch was how many people made up their minds about the product's worthiness and market fate without the benefit of using one for very long, if at all.
Asmith / Richard Prince's Journal-isms:
Station Turned Down Video of Police Beating — Uproar After Photographer Shows Material on YouTube — Essayist Debra Dickerson Says She Is “Homeless” — Laid-Off Baltimore Sun Workers Share Stories — White House Defends Court Nominee on Diversity — Lena Horne Services to be Held Friday in New York
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Newsonomics of copyediting value — [Each week, our friend Ken Doctor — author of Newsonomics and longtime watcher of the business side of digital news — writes about the economics of the news business for the Lab.] — What's copyediting worth these days?