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4:25 PM ET, September 24, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Jonathan Klein to Leave CNN  —  Jonathan Klein, the president of the beleaguered CNN/U.S. cable channel, is being replaced by Ken Jautz, the president of the tabloid-friendly sister channel HLN.  —  Mr. Jautz's title will be the executive vice president of CNN/U.S. Scot Safon …
RELATED:
Gabriel Sherman / New York Magazine:
CNN's Klein: ‘I Got Shot’  —  CNN president Jonathan Klein didn't come into work this morning.  —  “I didn't want to put people in an awkward situation,” he told me.  Two days ago, he learned he was out of a job.  —  On Wednesday afternoon, CNN Worldwide president Jim Walton …
Bill Carter / Media Decoder:
Zucker Announces Departure From NBC  —  Jeff Zucker, the chief executive of NBC Universal, told the company's employees in an e-mail Friday morning that he would step down from his position upon the completion of the takeover of NBC by Comcast.  —  The fate of Mr. Zucker …
RELATED:
Shira Ovide / Deal Journal:   Comcast's Burke: NBC Title Contender or Behind the Scenes Power?
Brooks Barnes / Media Decoder:
Disney's Internet Chief Resigns  —  The Walt Disney Company's top Internet executive, Steve Wadsworth, resigned late Thursday following a difficult tenure in which Disney's Web strategy underwent repeated retrenchments.  —  Mr. Wadsworth, whose title was president of the Disney Interactive Media Group …
Tim Glanfield / Beehive City:
The Times lose another 120,000 online readers behind paywall  —  The Times online readership declined by 120,000 from July to August according to data supplied to the Beehive by marketing analysts comScore.  —  In August 2010, its second month behind a paywall, The Times received 1.459 …
RELATED:
The Wall Blog:
Has the Times paywall killed its blogs?
Discussion: Harry's Place
eMarketer:
The Continued Rise of Blogging  —  More than half of web users will read blogs this year  —  Social networks and microblogs have in recent years nudged blogging off the social media pedestal.  For some consumers, who have more communication tools at their fingertips than they did a few years ago …
Arianna Huffington / Guardian:
Leonard Downie's downer  —  Old media sniping about the Huffington Post as a ‘parasite’ aggregator just shows they don't get the new link economy  —  Once again, some in the old media have decided that the best way to save, if not journalism, at least themselves, is by pointing fingers and calling names.
Joe Pompeo / The Wire:
Layoffs Come Down At Newsweek  —  As expected, there were layoffs at Newsweek this afternoon.  —  We hear that emails informing staffers of whether or not they would be keeping their jobs went out at 1 p.m.  —  A tipster tells us:  —  Everybody is just kind of walking around asking each other if they're OK, giving nods.
Discussion: New York Observer
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
As another magazine charges for access, where's the proof of paywall success?  —  The great paywall debate centres on the decision of big publishers to charge for access.  So most of the noise has been generated by Rupert Murdoch's online paywalls at The Times, Sunday Times, and now the News of the World.
RELATED:
The Wall Blog:   Readers react negatively as UBM puts building mag behind paywall
Michael Miner / Chicago Reader:
Net News in Chicago: Still Poor, Still Striving  —  No one's getting rich.  Hardly anyone's getting paid at all.  —  So we're told by The NEW News 2010, the second annual survey by the Community Media Workshop of what it calls “the Chicago area's online news ecosystem.”
Discussion: Romenesko
Charlie Rose / Business Week:
Google's Eric Schmidt Talks to Charlie Rose  —  Google's CEO on the power of Facebook, the rivalry with Apple (where until recently he sat on the board), and trying to do the right thing in China  —  How does Google see the future?  —  There's such an overwhelming amount of information now …
Nick Douglas / The Awl:
The Rise of Reddit: 4chan and Digg Get the Credit While Reddit Booms  —  Of the three main drivers of internet culture—blogs, social networking sites and forums—most people in the media and in the general Internet-using public only understand two.  Blogs work in a very obvious way: they're like magazines or newspapers, but light.
News & Tech:
Hearst: Ad campaign ‘mission accomplished’  —  Nearly five months after publishers Condé Naste, Hearst Magazines Meredith Corp., Time Inc. and Wenner Media launched the ad campaign “Magazines, The Power of Print,” the campaign seems to be working based on information from syndicated research firm GfK MRI.
Gillian Reagan / Capital New York:
Printing in pixels: The ‘Times’ lead designer and others on the next-generation web  —  The New York Times recently launched a redesign of its online opinion section, the silo where some of its most popular and well-trafficked writers—David Brooks, Maureen Dowd—display their columns.
Discussion: The Awl
Pete Wells / Diner's Journal:
Gourmet Is Reincarnated, This Time as an iPad App  —  Tonight, with the introduction of an iPad app, Condé Nast continues its attempt to prove that there is life after print for Gourmet.  —  The new product, described in press materials as “an innovative app and digital content experience …
Richard Lawler / Engadget:
Netflix, NBC Universal content deal brings Battlestar Galactica, SNL and more to Watch Instantly  —  Just in case a throwaway mention of a streaming-only subscription for US customers wasn't enough, an agreement adding plenty of recognizable content from NBC to its Watch Instantly service …
Jason Fell / Folio:
Hearst Turns Inward for New Business Ideas  —  Launches internal project soliciting plans for ‘high-potential’ ventures.  —  One of the biggest players in consumer magazine publishers is looking inward for inspiration.  —  As Hearst gears up to launch its mobile application think tank the App Lab …
Discussion: Romenesko
Wall Street Journal:
For Facebook, Movie Damage Control  —  Executives Sought to Influence ‘The Social Network,’ Which Harshly Portrays CEO Zuckerberg, Offered Another Version  —  Facebook Inc. executives have sought to discredit a new film's unflattering portrayal of Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg …
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
Saudi Arabians Will Soon Need A License To Blog  —  According to The Media Note, Saudi Information and Culture Ministry spokesman Abdul Rahman Al-Hazza announced last night Saudi time that all Saudi Arabian web publishers and online media, including blogs and forums, will need to be officially registered with the government.
Media Week:
Trust green lights BBC Magazines sell-off  —  The BBC Trust has rubber-stamped the sale in principle of a majority stake in BBC Magazines, putting brands such as Radio Times in play.  —  BBC Magazines: longstanding title Radio Times  —  The trust cleared the way for a sale in principle …
Discussion: Guardian, Press Gazette and Variety
Andrew Clark / Guardian:
Andrew Clark  —  When film-makers use real-life stories, like Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg's, blurring fact and fiction means we get factionalism  —  Gazing down from billboards across New York, the pale, furrowed face of a computer geek in deep concentration is adorned by the words: “Punk.
Claire Atkinson / New York Post:
Cash for cameos: ‘Wall Street’ pays  —  Tweet  —  Oliver Stone's latest movie, “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps,” is all about traders' love of making big bucks, but Gordon Gekko would choke on his cigar if he knew about the investment plans of the folks who have cameos in the finance-focused feature.
Emma Heald / Editors Weblog:
How do Yahoo and others compare to traditional news producers?  —  One of Yahoo's top journalists for its news blog The Upshot has quit, reportedly saying that Yahoo's ‘corporate conservatism’ got in the way of his attempts to report the news.  According to Daily Finance's Jeff Bercovici …
Guardian:
Film Power 100: the full list  —  You just want the raw facts?  Without any fancy interactivity?  You've come to the right place  —  • Datablog: download the full list as a spreadsheet  —  1) James Cameron  —  Director: Avatar, Titanic  —  2) Steven Spielberg
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
Catfish and the Death of Online Anonymity  —  The new documentary Catfish, which follows a New York 20-something's strange relationship with online strangers, might seem to be about the cloak of anonymity provided by the Internet.  It's not.  It's about the new impossibility of being anonymous online.
 
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Steven Bertoni / Money Talks:
Tribune Insider Denies Eisner Rumors
MediaShift:
A Guide to Rising Public Media Networks in the U.S.
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
Next New Networks Chairman, CEO Swap Roles
Nat Worden / Wall Street Journal:
Apple TV Splits Networks
Ed Yong / Not Exactly Rocket Science:
Should science journalists take sides?
Discussion: Argo, the Blog
Steven Church / Bloomberg:
Philadelphia Inquirer Lenders Outbid Raymond Perelman for Newspaper Owner
Ken Silverstein / Harper's:
Broder and Woodward Still on Lecture Circuit
Discussion: FishbowlDC
Janko Roettgers / NewTeeVee:
Netflix May Launch Streaming-Only Plan in the U.S.
 Earlier Picks: 
Joel Meares / CJR:
Q&A: This Week Host Christiane Amanpour
Greta Van Susteren / Gretawire:
just cancelled Bob Woodward interview ...
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
The Problem With TV Everywhere: There's No Business Model
Discussion: FM Blog
Jeff Bercovici / DailyFinance:
A New Era at Forbes: Staffer Calls Cover Story ‘Stupefyingly Inane’
Discussion: Talking Biz News, CJR and Romenesko
Nick Bilton / Bits:
Instapaper Goes From Hobby to Start-Up
Andrew Wallenstein / Hollywood Reporter:
EXCLUSIVE: MySpace taps new content chief
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
How Online Video Killed Blockbuster
 

 
From Techmeme:

Foo Yun Chee / Reuters:
Sources: EU may accept Apple's proposal to open its NFC payments tech to rivals, and may close its antitrust probe in May, letting Apple avoid hefty fines

Gaby Del Valle / The Verge:
The US Senate reauthorizes FISA's Section 702; some communication service providers had threatened to stop cooperating with the US government in case of a lapse

George Steer / Financial Times:
Nvidia closed down 10% on Friday, falling the most since March 2020 and losing more than $200B of its market value, as investors pull back from AI bets

 
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