Top News:
Media Decoder:
National Journal Hires Major Garrett From Fox News — Major Garrett, the chief White House correspondent for Fox News, is quitting his job at the cable news channel after eight years. He is joining National Journal as a Congressional correspondent. — Mr. Garrett's surprise departure comes …
RELATED:
Joe Pompeo / The Wire:
Politico Editor Jim VandeHei Sends Best Wishes To The New National …
Politico Editor Jim VandeHei Sends Best Wishes To The New National …
Discussion:
FishbowlDC and Inside Cable News
Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg / Wall Street Journal:
Amazon Loses E-Book Deal — A month after jolting the book industry with a deal to give Amazon.com Inc. exclusive digital access to some of the country's best-known literary works, literary agent Andrew Wylie is largely abandoning the agreement. — The Amazon deal was struck after Mr. Wylie failed …
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Julie Bosman / New York Times:
Random House Wins Battle for E-Book Rights
Random House Wins Battle for E-Book Rights
Discussion:
New York Observer, Poynter Online and Electronista
John Lippman / Company Town:
Tribune Co. creditors court Michael Eisner and Jeff Shell for top jobs — Former Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Michael D. Eisner is in discussions that could lead to his return to the media spotlight - as chairman of the now-bankrupt Tribune Co. — The media company's largest creditors …
Discussion:
Chicago Breaking Business, Romenesko, Hollywood Reporter, paidContent and The Wrap
Kelly McBride / Poynter Online:
SEO Makes It Too Late for Truth for ‘Ground Zero Mosque’ — It's not at ground zero and it's not just a mosque. — A number of news outlets have gone to great lengths recently to correct this falsehood. — PolitiFact has made several rulings on the issue.
Discussion:
MarketWatch, Editors Weblog, Writing / Editing, Journalism.co.uk and Journalism.org
RELATED:
Joe Flint / Company Town:
TV networks need to think hard about biting that Apple — Walt Disney Co.'s ABC and News Corp.'s Fox seem to be ready to take the plunge with Apple and cut a deal with the software giant to allow their shows to be rented for 99 cents an episode. — That Disney would be eager to go down this road is not too surprising.
RELATED:
Mark Milian / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
Podcaster Leo Laporte, the everywhere man — Leo Laporte arrived Thursday at Bob Hope Airport in Burbank. — On Friday morning he arrived at the office of KFI AM 640, the radio station that airs his syndicated “The Tech Guy” program. At 3:42 p.m., he was back at the airport, ready to fly home to Petaluma, Calif.
Donya Blaze / WebNewser:
Evan Smith of Texas Tribune: ‘Journalists Deserve a Living Wage’ — In the final segment of our Media Beat interview, I spoke with Texas Tribune CEO and editor-in-chief Evan Smith about the nonprofit news organization's business model. — Because the Tribune does not receive advertising …
Discussion:
mediabistro.com and Soup
MediaShift:
While Others Shrink, KQED Expands Cross-Platform News — Last month, KQED News in San Francisco dramatically expanded the scope of its news coverage with a new website, an increase from six to 16 local radio newscasts and the addition of eight news staffers, including six producers/reporters, a developer and a social media specialist.
The Atlantic Online:
10 Reading Revolutions Before E-Books — 1. The phrase “reading revolution” was probably coined by German historian Rolf Engelsing. He certainly made it popular. Engelsing was trying to describe something he saw in the 18th century: a shift from “intensive” reading and re-reading of very few texts to …
Discussion:
Snarkmarket
Peter Lauria / The Daily Beast:
Sumner's $1 Million Payoff — The billionaire chairman of Viacom and CBS has settled with a deputy who accused him of loutish behavior. Peter Lauria on the latest of Sumner Redstone's costly antics. — CBS Corp. spared its billionaire chairman Sumner Redstone the potential embarrassment …
Discussion:
The Wire, New York Observer, Company Town, Hollywood Reporter and Gawker
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Bankrupt Playlist.com Owes Labels $28 Million — It's wrestled with legal issues, on-off label licenses and low income. Now in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the Playlist.com music service formerly run by Owen Van Natta owes $27.7 million to the major and indie labels for use of their songs.
Discussion:
CNET News
Lloyd Grove / The Daily Beast:
Rachel's New War — She didn't want to talk about the mosque. But Fox baited her into it. The MSNBC host banters with Lloyd Grove about “fake” news, wearing glasses on air, and whether she wants to get married. — For a cable news host intent on luring eyeballs to her prime-time show …
Discussion:
News Hounds, Inside Cable News, Mediaite, TVNewser and The Huffington Post
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
New business news site to make use of semantic search tools — Two former business media managers have joined forces to create a business news site which will provide information and analysis using semantic technologies. — Neil Thackray (pictured), who was previously CEO at Nexus Business Media …
Zach Baron / Sound of the City:
How Kanye West's Twitter Killed Music Magazines — Today, Slate posts “an all-access, totally non-exclusive interview with the would-be king of hip-hop,” Kanye West. The conceit is as follows: though the rapper stopped giving many interviews in the aftermath of his mother's death …
Laura McGann / Nieman Journalism Lab:
NPR's Argo Project becomes the Argo Network, mixing the local and the national on reported blogs — NPR's Argo Project (or Project Argo — it seems to vary) is starting to take shape — launch is set for one week from today, September 1. Argo is the network's $3 million effort …
Brian Steinberg / AdAge:
Conan's TBS Show Nears Leno and Letterman Pricing — A Conan O'Brien Spot Costs $30,000 to $40,000, but Package Deals Complicate Comparisons — NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Do advertisers consider Conan O'Brien's upcoming cable show equivalent to Jay Leno and David Letterman's programs on broadcast networks?
Julian Clover / Broadband TV News:
BBC unready to commit to 3DTV format — The BBC says it is unclear as to which 3D format is most likely to emerge as the popular choice among public and commercial broadcasters. In an interview with Broadband TV News' sister publication New Television Insider, Graham Plumb …
Discussion:
CrunchGear and NewTeeVee
Sharon Waxman / The Wrap:
Janice Min's Hollywood Reporter: A Bitchy Switch — Who's the bitch now? Taking a page from her reign at Us Weekly, Janice Min has been making her presence felt on the Hollywood Reporter website. — Many inside the industry were shocked at a lead story on Tuesday that felt like a broadside …
Discussion:
New York Observer and Hollywood Reporter
Nate Silver / FiveThirtyEight:
Welcome (and Welcome Back) to FiveThirtyEight — FiveThirtyEight.com premiered on March 7, 2008, three days after Hillary Rodham Clinton had won the Democratic primaries in Texas and Ohio — victories that were widely described as giving her momentum in her race for the Democratic nomination.
Discussion:
New York Observer and New York Times
Chris Roush / Talking Biz News:
The life of a freelance biz reporter, aka getting your life back — TALKING BIZ NEWS EXCLUSIVE — Heidi N. Moore has been a financial reporter for more than a decade, working in such newsrooms as Institutional Investor, The Deal and The Wall Street Journal.