Top News:
Guardian:
MPs seek fresh inquiry into NoW phone hacking — • Calls for parliament to order second inquiry into hacking — • Scotland Yard to examine allegations by former NoW reporter — News International and David Cameron's PR chief, Andy Coulson, face the prospect of a fresh parliamentary inquiry …
Discussion:
BBC, Jon Slattery, Financial Times, The Staggers, The Independent, The Dispatch Box, Bagehot's notebook, Daily Mail, Reuters, Independent.ie and Liberal Conspiracy
RELATED:
New York Times:
In Britain, Labour Politicians Call for New Look at Scandal — LONDON — Senior opposition politicians are calling on the government to respond to renewed accusations that Downing Street's chief communications officer, Andy Coulson, encouraged reporters to illegally intercept messages …
Discussion:
Guardian, Telegraph, Liberal Conspiracy and The Staggers
Jack Shafer / Slate:
Team Murdoch on Ethics
Team Murdoch on Ethics
Discussion:
Guardian, The Daily Beast, BBC College of Journalism Blog and Gawker
Jeremy W. Peters / Media Decoder:
New York Observer to Cast Its Net Beyond the Upper East Side — Listening to Kyle Pope, the editor of The New York Observer, discuss how he wants to re-energize his newspaper sounds a lot like someone describing a Broadway show or a television series that has run a little past its prime.
Paul Carr / TechCrunch:
Rollover Minutes: How Adam Penenberg Has Legitimised New, New, New Journalism. Again. — Adam Penenberg. If you call yourself an online journalist, and yet that name doesn't immediately prompt a nod of recognition - a smile, even - then it's time to close your laptop and bow your head in shame.
Discussion:
Bloomberg
RELATED:
Adam Penenberg / Fast Company:
The $131M Ford Rollover Death Verdict That Twitter Broke — Fast Company's Adam L. Penenberg tweets the breaking news about a verdict against Ford in the death of rising Mets star Brian Cole. As reporters lagged behind on the story, Penenberg discovered a new media use for the 140-character format.
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb and Mediaite
Arthur S. Brisbane / New York Times:
In an Age of Voices, Moving Beyond the Facts — WHAT some call opinion, others call interpretive journalism — a label as opaque as the practice. Call it what you will, nothing has generated more reader indignation in the past few weeks than when it has appeared on a news page.
Discussion:
Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog and Kirk LaPointe's …
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Some Newspapers Shift Coverage After Tracking Readers Online — In most businesses, not knowing how well a particular product is performing would be almost unthinkable. But newspapers have always been a peculiar business, one that has stubbornly, proudly clung to a sense that focusing …
Discussion:
College Media Matters
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Regulating sex and speech — Let me start with a disclosure: I hope to think that Craig Newmark is a friend. He can be as hard for me to read as James Joyce or C++. But I know him as a decent and genuine man who believes that he is bringing a service to millions of people …
Discussion:
CNN, New York Times, Gawker and Advocate, more at Techmeme »
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
The newswire quandary — Questions: should newswire agencies serve consumers - directly? And, to a broader extent, how does the current information shift impact the agencies' future? Two recent events lead me to explore these questions in today's Monday Note.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Blogging And Mass Psychomanipulation — If I ever write another book it will probably be about one of three topics. The first is the truth about how the press and journalism really works - the sausage making - to show just how much of a beautiful, subjective and chaotic mess it all is.
Discussion:
SmoothSpan Blog
Paola Totaro / Sydney Morning Herald:
To catch a cheat: behind the scenes of ‘gotcha’ journalism — But the tabloid is facing serious allegations of its own, writes Paola Totaro in London. — The sensational investigation by the News of the World into the Pakistani match-fixing scandal in London began in Sydney nine months ago …
Felix Salmon:
When short sellers fund journalists — I'm as much of a fan of insidery media navel-gazing as anybody, but Cary Spivak and the AJR have gone way too far with their 3,200-word thumbsucker on the ethics of funding investigative journalism with the proceeds from short-selling.