Top News:
David Zurawik / Z on TV:
Fox News says it will not cover burning of Quran — In a bold move that is likely to be much discussed in coming days, Fox News said today that it will not cover the burning of the Quran on Saturday if Pastor Terry Jones follows through on his plan to burn copies of Islam's sacred book.
Discussion:
New York Times, Associated Press, Romenesko, Media Decoder, CJR, Mediaite, USA Today, Silicon Alley Insider, PostPartisan, Gothamist, TVNewser, New York Magazine, The Wire and CNN
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Sarah Lacy / TechCrunch:
Don't Blame Media, Blame the Media-Audience Infinite Loop — I've spent two days listening to and reading near-constant coverage of the wacko who's planning to burn Korans in Gainsville, Florida, and increasingly the stories have been about whether or not all the press attention has been irresponsible.
Discussion:
New York Times, Lost Remote, Mediaite, Strupp, International Media and USA Today
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
Plan to burn Qurans ignites media frenzy — Pastor Terry Jones of Gainesville, Fla., got a bit of local press last Sept. 11 when members of his small congregation stood on the side of the road wearing “Islam is of the devil” T-shirts. This year, he has upped the ante with an anti-Islam stunt …
Jenna Wortham / Bits:
Betaworks and The Times Plan a Social News Service — Something is stirring deep within the technology incubator Betaworks: A personalized news service called News.me that is being developed in collaboration with The New York Times. — On Thursday, a cryptic placeholder for the service went live.
Discussion:
paidContent, The Next Web and Lost Remote
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
Newsweek's Weymouth heads to Washington Post — Lally Weymouth, a special diplomatic correspondent at Newsweek, becomes the latest high-ranking staffer to leave the magazine since audio magnate Sidney Harman agreed to buy it from the Washington Post Co. — Weymouth will join …
Discussion:
On Media's Blog and Romenesko
John Koblin / New York Observer:
Wall Street Journal To Launch A Book Review Section — The Observer has learned that The Wall Street Journal will launch a weekly book review within the next few weeks. The Journal has never had a standalone book review before, and creating one now flies in the face of ever-dwindling book coverage in papers across the country.
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Scarborough and Kinsley Will Write for Politico — Politico has built a successful enterprise on the idea that there is no such thing as too much information when it comes to political news. Now it is going to apply that concept to political opinion. — Starting on Oct. 1 …
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blog, Romenesko, The Politico, CJR, rbr.com, WebNewser, The Wire, New York Magazine, Gawker and The Huffington Post
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Reuters Taps Slate's James Ledbetter As Website Editor — Two months after the Slate Group folded its business news site The Big Money, its former editor-in-chief James Ledbetter is heading to Reuters (NYSE: TRI) to run the company's website, paidContent has learned. Both Reuters and Ledbetter confirmed the hiring.
Discussion:
Romenesko, Talking Biz News and DailyFinance
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
What Apple's new App Store rules mean for news orgs: Some new clarity, but still plenty of fuzziness — After loads of criticism for unexplained decisions, inscrutable rules, and what appeared to be a desire to protect the public's morals and the feelings of the powerful …
Wall Street Journal:
As Ratings Slump, CNN Shifts Focus to New Faces — CNN, rebooting in a bid to revive its slumping ratings, officially tapped a former British tabloid editor to take over its flagship prime-time show. — Piers Morgan, who in recent years has reinvented himself as a TV interviewer and judge …
Discussion:
Speakeasy
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Nellie Andreeva / Deadline.com:
How Piers Morgan's Deal To Take Over For Larry King Came About
How Piers Morgan's Deal To Take Over For Larry King Came About
Discussion:
Company Town, Movieline and New York Times
Evelyn Rusli / TechCrunch:
Video Publishing Platform Ooyala Raises $22 Million, Prepares For Major Asian Expansion — Advertisers are not the only ones plowing money into the online video space with gusto, you can add large, international investors to that growing list. — This morning, Ooyala announced …
Discussion:
VentureBeat, Online Video News, NewTeeVee, The Huffington Post, paidContent and Beet.TV, more at Techmeme »
Ethan Smith / Speakeasy:
MTV Overtakes Vevo as Top Online Music Destination … Thanks largely to an ad-sales partnership with Warner Music Group, MTV Networks last month became the Web's most-visited music destination, surpassing rival Vevo, according to new statistics from ComScore Media Metrix.
Discussion:
AdAge, The Wrap and Crain's New York Business
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
BREAKING: YouTube Still Isn't Profitable. But It Will Be, Says Google. Again. — Officially, Google doesn't talk about YouTube's profitability, or lack thereof. Except, of course, when Google executives do talk about it. — Then they say that YouTube is very close to becoming profitable.
Wendy Davis / MediaPost:
Gannett Not Eager To Join Righthaven's Campaign Against Bloggers — Copyright enforcement company Righthaven might have signed up the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette owner, WEHCO, as a new client, but not all newspapers are eager to start suing nonprofits, bloggers and politicians for reposting material.
Discussion:
PlagiarismToday
Joel Johnson / Gizmodo:
Forget Apple TV. AirPlay Is Apple's Sneak Attack On Television — It was almost a footnote. AirPlay, the audio streaming protocol once known as AirTunes, got just one minute of keynote time last week. But it might end up as the backbone of Apple's assault on the living room. More »
MediaShift:
Columbia, Medill Training New Breed of Programmer-Journalists — Education content on MediaShift is sponsored by Carnegie-Knight News21, an alliance of 12 journalism schools in which top students tell complex stories in inventive ways. See tips for spurring innovation and digital learning at Learn.News21.com.
Helsinki Times:
Telanne: “Prepare to pay for online content” — Alma Media's CEO Kai Telanne is convinced that the days of free online news content are numbered. In an interview with the National Coalition party organ Verkkouutiset, he said that in future more and more newspapers will charge readers for online content.