Top News:
Brad Stone / New York Times:
U.S. Is Said to Scrutinize Apple's Online Music Tactics — SAN FRANCISCO — The Justice Department is examining Apple's tactics in the market for digital music, and its staff members have talked to major music labels and Internet music companies, according to several people briefed on the conversations.
RELATED:
Nat Ives / AdAge:
New Yorker Plans One Price for Access Across Digital Platforms — Magazines' Current Model Charges Existing Subscribers Extra for iPad and Kindle Editions — NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — The New Yorker wants to let readers pay once for digital access across the iPad, the Kindle and other platforms …
Media Week:
'If paywall doesn't work I'm in the s**t', admits News Int's commercial chief — LONDON - News International's commercial leader, Paul Hayes, joked his neck could be on the line if the publisher's eagerly anticipated plans to erect paywalls around online content fail next month.
RELATED:
Rory Cellan-Jones / dot.Rory:
The Times paywall: An end to sharing
The Times paywall: An end to sharing
Discussion:
Mashable!, The Times, malcolm coles, Ethical Martini, blogs.ft.com, Journalism.co.uk, TechCrunch Europe, One Man & His Blog and Adam Westbrook
Lewis DVorkin / The Copy Box:
About those M&A rumors: Forbes to acquire True/Slant — For me, True/Slant began a long time ago. — It didn't have a name when I scribbled the beginnings of an idea on a calendar page during an interminable flight from Washington to New York. There was a vision, though …
Discussion:
MediaMemo, paidContent, Folio, VentureBeat, Runnin' Scared, Adweek, DailyFinance, Taibblog, MinOnline and Romenesko
Stephanie Clifford / Media Decoder:
Two More Editors Leave Harper's — A flight of high-level editors from Harper's Magazine is continuing. — Two senior editors, Bill Wasik and Luke Mitchell, will be leaving the magazine soon. Kathy Park Price, the Harper's spokeswoman, confirmed that they had given notice.
Robert Andrews / paidContent:UK:
Stop The Presses: ‘Sunset’ For Print In Five Years, FT Sees — For years, even many of us in the online realm had countered digital prophesies of “the death of print” with cautious reservation. — But now - as newsprint costs rise, digital operations grow their importance to publishers …
Discussion:
Kirk LaPointe's …
Laura McGann / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Borrowing from burgers: franchise-model startup wants to make community news sites profitable — Launching a community news site is tough. You've got editorial decisions, like putting together a team of reporters and editors, plus technical hurdles like finding the right CMS and hosting service …
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Engaging with journos: At GigaOM, there's an app for that — Have you ever tried to get in touch with an online journalist, only to wander her employer's labyrinthine maze of non-linked bylines and PR department messages and institutional contact forms? Have you ever, desperate but not optimistic …
Multichannel:
Tiles Re-Ups As G4 President For Three More Years — Executives Signs Extension With Comcast Entertainment Group — G4 president Neal Tiles has inked a three-year renewal pact with Comcast Entertainment Group. — Under Tiles's tutelage, G4 has emerged as TV's destination for young guys …
Discussion:
Variety
Jim Romenesko / Romenesko:
Bankrupt Tribune wants to give another $15 million in bonuses to executives — The new bonuses, which cover 42 top executives, include nine of Tribune's 10 top-ranking corporate leaders. The company has already handed out $57.4 million worth of bonuses while under bankruptcy protection.
Discussion:
Speakeasy
Glen Dickson / Broadcasting & Cable:
Tennis Channel teams with Google TV Ads — Latest cable net to use automated platform — Cable sports network Tennis Channel announced May 24 that it will make part of its advertising inventory available through Google TV Ads, the Internet search giant's online platform for buying cable spots.
Discussion:
rbr.com
Greg Sandoval / Media Maverick:
Google offered Viacom $592 million for content — Not long after Google acquired YouTube, the search engine offered nearly $600 million in guaranteed revenue if Viacom—the parent company of MTV Networks, Comedy Central, and Paramount Pictures—licensed its TV shows and films to YouTube, records show.
Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
BitTorrent Download Record Shattered By Lost Series Finale — Last year, Lost achieved the questionable honor of being the second most-pirated TV-show on BitTorrent. With more than 6 million downloads for a single episode, Lost was only trailing Heroes by a few thousand downloads.
Antonina Jedrzejczak / The Wire:
Music Videos Make Up 57% Of The Web's Most Watched Viral Videos — Visible Measures, an Internet video metrics website, has a feature called the 100 Million Views Club, which tracks the most-watched viral videos of all time. — Nate Elliot, an analyst at Forrester Research …
Damon Kiesow / Mobile Media:
Former Newspaper Photographer Becomes Mobile, Social Journalist — “Hi, I'm Jim. I'm from the Internet.” — That was the moment Jim MacMillan, a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist, veteran of 17 years at the Philadelphia Daily News and former embedded journalist of the war in Iraq, realized the game had changed.
Discussion:
Pursuing the Complete …
Jim O'Neill / FierceOnlineVideo:
Metacafe on its new movie channel: We're not Hulu or YouTube — Metacafe doesn't have the size of YouTube or the premium television content of Hulu. But Metacafe CEO Erick Hachenburg says that's where his company can gain ground on both of them. — “The challenge for this space …
MediaShift:
PBS NewsHour Collaborations Require Buy-In from the Top — Collaboration is one of the public broadcasting buzzwords of the moment. The new PBS NewsHour is a national news organization that is trying to figure out how collaboration works. — Collaboration was one of the bullet points when we announced the changes to the program.
CNBC:
SEC Investigating Leaks in Galleon Insider Trading Case — The government's case against accused insider trader Raj Rajaratnam has taken an unexpected twist. The government is now investigating leaks to journalists alleged to have come from the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Bill Carter / Media Decoder:
Smallish Crowds for Finales of ‘24’ and ‘Law & Order’ — The long runs of two of television's recent titans, “24” on Fox and “Law & Order” on NBC, mostly whimpered to an end Monday night with no real bang in the ratings. — The series finales of both series did only slightly better Monday …
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
If You're Going To Dump On ‘Citizen Journalism’ Projects... It Probably Helps Not To Get All Your Facts Wrong — This one comes via Jay Rosen, who points us to an article at NowToronto.com that trashes a new Toronto-based journalism project called OpenFile, for being a “citizen journalism” project.
Joe Pompeo / The Wire:
Eamon Javers Bails On Politico For CNBC — Eamon Javers, one of Politico's White House reporters, is headed to CNBC, where he was once an on-air correspondent covering the intersection of business and politics. He's joining the network as a Washington reporter covering lobbying and regulatory affairs.
Claire Hughes Johnson / The Official Google Blog:
Google's U.S. economic impact — (Cross-posted to the Google Public Policy Blog) — In 1978, people told Douglas Twiddy he was crazy when he started renting out vacation homes in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. More than 30 years later, his son Ross is using our AdWords advertising program …
Joe Ciarallo / FishbowlNY:
Josh Tyrangiel on Business Reporting: 'What I'm Noticing Is a Lot More Skepticism' — In part two of our Media Beat interview with Josh Tyrangiel, editor of Bloomberg Businessweek, we talk about the state of business and financial reporting. — “I'm new to the incredible pressurized coverage …