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7:05 AM ET, June 4, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
The Times to Host Political Polling Site FiveThirtyEight  —  The New York Times said Thursday that it would begin hosting the popular blog FiveThirtyEight and make its founder, Nate Silver, a regular contributor to the newspaper and the Sunday magazine.  —  Mr. Silver, a statistical wizard …
RELATED:
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Articles of incorporation: Nate Silver and Jim Roberts on the NYT's absorption of FiveThirtyEight  —  Big news today: Nate Silver and his wonderblog, FiveThirtyEight, are moving on up to The New York Times.  Later this summer — probably in early August — FTE's statistictastic posts …
John Koblin / New York Observer:
Times Sends Journal Cease and Desist Letter Over Brand Campaign  —  A lawyer from The New York Times Company has sent a cease-and-desist letter to the marketing director at Dow Jones after a recent Journal advertisement used the same language as a recent Times ad.  —  “Not Just Wall Street.
Kristen Purcell / Pew Internet:
The State of Online Video  —  Seven in ten adult internet users (69%) have used the internet to watch or download video.  That represents 52% of all adults in the United States.  —  Driven by the popularity of online video among 18-29 year-olds, there have been dramatic increases since 2007 in the number of American adults watching:
RELATED:
Jennifer Valentino-DeVries / Digits:
Funny Videos Overtake News in Online Viewing, Survey Finds
Discussion: Poynter Online and NewTeeVee
Robert Feder / blogs.vocalo.org:
Poker party ‘desecrates’ Tribune Tower shrine  —  ← Chicago in the national news: 6/2  —  Well, if it HAD to be dececrated, at least it was done by a group of people with taste and refinement, people with values.....WHAT A BUNCH OF ***HOLES!!!!  —  Ebert Thorn #  —  Can I just say “who cares?”
Michael J. Miller / Forward Thinking:
AOL's Tim Armstrong: The Power of Local Journalism  —  Tim Armstrong , CEO of AOL, said he believes the next phase of the Internet is about content.  And he told the audience at D8 that AOL is working on the “future of journalism.”  —  Armstrong stressed the importance and power of local journalism …
Claire Kirch / Publishers Weekly:
Paris Literary Icon Launches Prize and Magazine  —  Shakespeare & Company Bookshop, the Paris literary icon originally founded by Sylvia Beach in 1919, and opened by George Whitman in 1951, is launching a literary magazine and literary prize.  Both ventures will be officially announced …
Discussion: Vanity Fair, MOBYLIVES and FishbowlNY
Alex Weprin / WebNewser:
ABC News Digital Reorganizes Leadership  —  ABC News Digital is reorganizing its senior leadership, according to an email from senior VP of digital Paul Slavin.  —  Slavin announced that Jon Dube, VP of ABCNews.com, decided to take one of the buyouts that ABC News offered employees earlier in the year, and will be leaving ABC in July.
Discussion: paidContent
Phil Bronstein / SFGate:
@BPGlobalPR “Twitter-Gate” Shows That Even Digital Tools Have Rules  —  You probably missed it, but journalism died early last week.  Again.  —  The latest obit was written by SF MuniFail blogger and design director Mike Monteiro.  He was complaining about a CNET story from reporter Caroline McCarthy …
mywebtimes.com:
Appellate Court: Times must turn over commenter's info  —  Dan Churney, danc@mywebtimes.com, 815-431-4050  —  By a 2-1 margin this week in a precedent-setting case that drew attention from news and watchdog organizations across the country, the Third District Appellate Court in Ottawa ruled …
David Cohen / WebNewser:
CNN.com: That's Entertainment (Revamped)  —  CNN.com rolled out a retooled Entertainment section, with new features including: spotlighted breaking-news stories and videos, complete with CNN.com and Facebook comments; the Click section, which features a gallery of paparazzi photos; a Quote Board …
Josh Stearns / Save the News Blog:
Public Policy and Journalism Innovation  —  Over the weekend the journalism tweetosphere and blogs were abuzz with rumors of a government plot to freeze journalism in time by propping up a range of failing business models at the expense of new innovation in news.
Nick Wingfield / Wall Street Journal:
Flo TV Fails to Attract, Qualcomm CEO Says  —  RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif.—A service from Qualcomm Inc. for delivering television shows to mobile phones and other portable devices hasn't found the audience the company had hoped for, according to Qualcomm Chief Executive Paul Jacobs.
Discussion: Multichannel News
Douglas Quenqua / ClickZ:
Google Quietly Brings Twitter Feeds to Display Ads  —  Google has quietly invited a handful of advertisers to test a new display-ad integration with Twitter.  —  The layout of the ads is simple: The familiar Twitter bird is in the left-hand corner, and the advertiser's latest tweet is featured in a box centered in the unit.
Discussion: AdPulp
Sarah Rabil / Bloomberg:
Viacom CEO Says TV Ad Sales Are ‘Starting to Break’ as Economy Recovers  —  Viacom Inc. Chief Executive Officer Philippe Dauman said the market is “starting to break” for broadcast and cable-television commercials sold in advance of next season, an improvement compared with last year.
Discussion: Variety and Media Buyer Planner
Suzanne Vranica / Wall Street Journal:
Help Wanted: Creative Types  —  As the Recession Eases, Ad Agencies Scramble to Fill a Critical Job at the Top  —  The recession may be easing, but the tough economy has left a gaping hole in one of Madison Avenue's most critical operations: the creative department.
Discussion: Gawker and AdPulp
Journalism.org:
IN SOCIAL MEDIA, TECHNOLOGY DRIVES THE NEWS AGENDA  —  In a week when the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico dominated the mainstream press, the social media were focused on news that revolved around computer technology.  —  For bloggers, the main subject was the ever-popular social networking site, Facebook.
Discussion: Babbage and WebNewser
Javier C. Hernandez / New York Times:
Breakfast With Dean Kagan: A Student Journalist's Eye-Opener  —  When I was 19 and a rookie student reporter, I asked out Elena Kagan.  Harvard deans don't usually respond to e-mails from overzealous freshmen looking for scoops, but she did, and within seven minutes we had a date: breakfast, the Charles Hotel, 8:30 a.m.
Jessa Crispin / Need to Know | PBS:
A writer leaves journalism to find truth in fiction  —  Novelist Lorraine Adams had another life as a journalist.  A Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter for The Washington Post, she left the newspaper after 11 years and published her first and widely acclaimed novel, “Harbor,” in 2004.
Discussion: Romenesko
John Koblin / New York Observer:
Architectural Digest's Paige Rense Noland to Retire; Search for New Editor Under Way  —  Paige Rense Noland, the legendary editor of Architectural Digest for the last 35 years, is retiring in August.  The news was announced in a Condé Nast press release.
John Eggerton / Broadcasting & Cable:
FCC to Hold Public Forum on Comcast-NBCU  —  Billed as a “workshop,” not a formal hearing, forum likely to be July 13 in Chicago  —  The FCC plans to host a public forum on the proposed Comcast-NBC Universal joint venture next month, according to an FCC source familiar with the plans.
Discussion: Tower Ticker and Multichannel
Jeff Israely / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The line between “content” and “journalism,” and deciding which side I want to be on  —  [Jeff Israely, a Time magazine foreign correspondent in Europe, is in the planning stages of a news startup — a “new global news website.”  He details his experience as a new news entrepreneur at his site …
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Newsonomics of commercial crowdsourcing  —  [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.]  —  There are no new ideas in the digital business …
 
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 More News: 
Tom Scocca / Scocca:
New York Times Pleads Guilty to Remixing M.I.A. Quote
Discussion: Speakeasy and CJR
Andy Medici / Poynter Online:
Strange Bedfellows: What Journalism Can Learn From Adult Entertainment
Holly Sanders Ware / New York Post:
Talking money  —  Call him Conan O'Mighty.  —  Cable powerhouse …
Discussion: The Wire and Company Town
Joe Pompeo / The Wire:
Beware, Wall Street: Roddy Boyd's New Blog, The Financial Investigator …
Paul Farhi / American Journalism Review:
Going Respectable?  —  The National Enquirer got high marks …
Discussion: Romenesko
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Fwix Moves Beyond News, Indexing ‘Everything’ Local
Discussion: TechCrunch
Peter Kafka / D8 Conference:
Demand Media's Richard Rosenblatt and ProPublica's Paul Steiger Live at D8
Discussion: Romenesko and Tech Trader Daily
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Is 70 percent of what we read online really by our friends?
 Earlier Picks: 
Laurie Sullivan / MediaPost:
Citysearch LLC Relaunches As CityGrid Media
Jeff Jarvis / New York Post:
How not to save news  —  The Federal Trade Commis sion says it wants to save journalism.
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Exclusive: Microsoft U.S. Ad Sales VP Domeniconi to Depart …
Alex Pham / Los Angeles Times:
Vevo's Rio Caraeff is king of online music videos
The Atlantic Wire:
MEDIA DIET: Clay Shirky: What I Read
Jay Yarow / The Wire:
Wired's iPad App Now On 3% Of All iPads (AAPL)