Top News:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
We Need More Opinion In News, Not Less — I'm dismayed to see journalists continue to be punished, even fired, for expressing their opinions on the things they cover. Yesterday CNN terminated Octavia Nasr over a tweet praising a late Hezbollah leader. Last month Helen Thomas was forced to resign over statements about Israel.
Jeremy W. Peters / Media Decoder:
Time Takes a Step Away From Free Web Content — Time has decided to dive head first into an issue that has bedeviled many a news organization before it: how to wean online readers off their addictions to free content. — Time began taking content from its current issue off its Web site this week …
Discussion:
Shaping the Future …, Mediaite, Newsweek, Nieman Journalism Lab, Crikey, Guardian and MediaMemo
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Is It Time to Stop Blogging and Start an Email Newsletter? — When entrepreneur Jason Calacanis shut down his blog in 2008 and replaced it with a subscription-only email newsletter, his move seemed to be more of a personal response to abusive reader comments rather than a leading indicator of a trend …
Discussion:
Inc.com
Peter Berger / AdAge:
Content Farms Compete With Book Publishers, Not News Sites — Suite101 CEO on the Online Journalism Debate and News Organizations' Red Herring — The debate about online content has spiked in recent weeks, particularly around journalism, with Demand Media providing content to news sites such as USA Today …
Jolie O'Dell / Mashable!:
Pete Cashmore on How He Grew Mashable [VIDEO] — Our CEO and founder Pete Cashmore recently sat down for an interview with Bloomberg Venture to talk about how Mashable has grown as a startup and a small business. — We're a humble outfit, but — in Bloomberg's words — we're also one of the world's most profitable blogs.
Russ Smith / splicetoday.com:
Pass the Gravy, Mom — The Wall Street Journal's signature “a-hed” front-story is thriving, despite predictions that Rupert Murdoch would ditch it. — Two years ago, in a long feature story for The Atlantic about Rupert Murdoch and his takeover of The Wall Street Journal …
Discussion:
Romenesko
Mike Melanson / ReadWriteWeb:
Facebook Dominates Third-Party Logins For All But News — More and more, we're logging into websites using our credentials from sites like Facebook, Twitter, Google or Yahoo. But which one is leading in the battle of the third-party login? What login do we chose when it comes to entertainment sites like MTV?
Claire Atkinson / New York Post:
Rob Lowe may join bid for Miramax — The Miramax story took another strange turn yesterday when actor Rob Lowe emerged as a potential player in a bid to acquire the film studio from Walt Disney Co. — Lowe has ties to Tom Barrack's Colony Capital, which five days ago threw its hat …
Chris Rovzar / New York Magazine:
What Can Our Times Learn From the Launch of the London Times' Pay Wall? — On July 2, the London Times went behind a pay wall, enforcing a £2 a week surcharge to read any and all of its content. It was Rupert Murdoch's decision to make the move, as part of his larger plan to move …
Discussion:
mediabistro.com
Joe Flint / Company Town:
Comcast promises $20 million for venture capital fund for minority entrepreneurs — Comcast Corp. said it will contribute at least $20 million to a venture capital fund that the cable giant is creating to back minority entrepreneurs in developing new media content and technology.
Chris Ariens / TVNewser:
Jim Goldman Leaving CNBC for PR, Net Hires New Silicon Valley Reporter — Jim Goldman, CNBC's Silicon Valley bureau chief since 2003, is leaving the network, TVNewser has learned. And the business news channel has already found a new correspondent to cover the technology beat.
Paul Farhi / Washington Post:
National Public Radio is changing its name to NPR — No need for formalities here: National Public Radio now says it wants to be known simply as NPR. — So the Washington-based organization has quietly changed its name to its familiar initials. Much like the corporate names KFC or AT&T, the initials now stand for the initials.
Paul Bradshaw / Online Journalism Blog:
An introduction to data scraping with Scraperwiki — Last week I spent a day playing with the screen scraping website Scraperwiki with a class of MA Online Journalism students and a local blogger or two, led by Scraperwiki's own Anna Powell-Smith. I thought I might take the opportunity …
The Barnes & Noble Review:
Clay Shirky — (With additional questions from James Mustich, Editor-in-Chief of the Barnes & Noble Review). — According to media columnist Michael Wolff, the name Clay Shirky is “now uttered in technology circles with the kind of reverence with which left-wingers used to say, ‘Herbert Marcuse’.”
Discussion:
Snarkmarket
Brian Steinberg / AdAge:
To Get LeBron, ESPN Cedes Control Over Ads, News — James Tells Sports Network Which Reporter Can Ask Him to Reveal ‘The Decision’ — NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Did ESPN just get “mediajacked”? — Normally, an event as important and interesting as basketball wunderkind LeBron James announcing …
Discussion:
TVNewser, The Wire, Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog, Company Town, New York Observer, New York Times, Tower Ticker, Gawker, DailyFinance, SportsMoney, The Wrap, Romenesko and Strupp
RELATED:
Vadim Lavrusik / Mashable!:
More Content Creators Cashing in on Blip.tv — Blip.tv is sending out more checks to its content providers than ever. The New York-based independent web shows platform has increased the number of payouts to its content creators by 77% between Q1 to Q2 of this year, Co-founder Dina Kaplan told Mashable in a recent interview.
Discussion:
the blip.tv blog
Bill Mitchell / Poynter Online:
Financing Final Farewells: Legacy.com and the Business of Death — Newspaper obits have come a long way since the Times of London started publishing its “Death's Doings” column in the mid-19th Century. But the ongoing pressure for newspapers to generate as much revenue as possible is generating …
Fern Siegel / MediaPost:
Lehrer To Expand Bravo Development Duties — >Bravo has upped Eli Lehrer to vice president, development. Lehrer, who had overseen development and production for the East Coast, continues to report to Andy Cohen, the senior vice president, original programming and development.
Discussion:
Variety
Matthew Battles / Nieman Journalism Lab:
From prefab paint to the power of typewriters to the Internet: Distrust of the Shallows is nothing new — [Matthew Battles is one of my favorite thinkers about how we read, consume, and learn. He's reading and reacting to Clay Shirky's Cognitive Surplus and Nicholas Carr's The Shallows.
Zeke Turner / New York Observer:
Pow! This 3D Magazine Knocked My Lights Out! — There are things you want to see in 3D in a magazine like Time Out New York and things you don't. But before we can see anything, we have to assemble the glasses. The perforation is hard to manage, forget putting the three parts together.
Discussion:
Gizmodo
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
The Facebook Movie Will Not Be Using Facebook to Market the Facebook Movie — You might think a huge target audience and golden marketing opportunity for a high-profile Hollywood movie on Facebook, titled “The Social Network,” would be the 500 million members of Facebook. — Maybe not so much.
Steve Krakauer / Mediaite:
CNN's Octavia Nasr Leaving Network After Controversial Hezbollah Tweet — In the latest case of new media (or oversharing) gone wrong, CNN's Senior Editor of Mideast Affairs Octavia Nasr is leaving the company following the controversy caused by her tweet in praise of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah
Discussion:
Salon, The Wire, Mashable!, National Review, CJR, BBC, Switched, Inside Cable News, Media Decoder, Speakeasy, Silicon Alley Insider, newsfeed.time.com, Big Journalism, Editors Weblog, New York Observer, Think Progress, Journalism.co.uk, The Daily Caller, TVNewser, The Huffington Post, Crooks and Liars, Chickaboomer, Romenesko, Global Voices in English, The Wrap, Talking Points Memo and Gawker, more at Techmeme »
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Jenna Lee Moves to Fox News from Fox Business — Fox News Channel is transferring an anchor from the Fox Business Network over to the mothership. — Jenna Lee, who has been at Fox Business since its founding nearly three years ago, will begin co-hosting the lunchtime hours on Fox News next week, the network announced Wednesday.
Discussion:
Talking Biz News, TVNewser, TVWeek.com, Business Wire, rbr.com, The Wire and The Huffington Post
Nick Bilton / Bits:
Don't Look for a TV in Television's Future — I have seen the future of television, and it doesn't involve a television. — Growing up in England, I remember intently following the World Cup soccer matches; we called it football of course. Back then, my viewing and engagement options were slim.