Top News:
Nikesh Arora / The Official Google Blog:
$5 million to encourage innovation in digital journalism — Journalism is fundamental to a functioning democracy. So as media organizations globally continue to broaden their presence online, we're eager to play our part on the technology side—experimenting with new ways of presenting news online …
Discussion:
MediaMemo, Romenesko, KnightBlog, Knight Foundation, MediaFile, paidContent, mediabistro.com, JNews, Mixed Media, ReadWriteWeb, The Next Web and Guardian
RELATED:
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Google donates $5 million for news innovation to Knight Foundation and new international efforts — Google and news organizations have had a rocky time of it. To overdramatize the situation only slightly: Google insists that it cares about journalism as a necessity of our shared democracy …
Discussion:
rbr.com, SAI, KnightBlog and The Next Web
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Politico, Seeing a Market Need, Adds a Paid News Service — To the rapidly growing field of Washington reportage, add one more entrant: Politico Pro. — Politico, the Web site and free daily publication that brought a 24-7 cable news sensibility to political reporting …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals, Fast Company, The Wire, AdPulp, Editors Weblog, New York Observer, The Huffington Post and New York Magazine, Thanks:eldon
Howard Kurtz / The Daily Beast:
Katie Couric, On the Move — The CBS anchor is nearing the end of her contract—and signs point surprisingly to her staying put. Howard Kurtz talks to her about her salary, her next move—and her love of the campaign trail. — Katie Couric is feeling liberated.
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
The Perfect Content Companion For iPad + Instapaper, Longreads Gets A Website — I've been in love with the simple bookmarking service Instapaper for a few years now. The release of the iPad has made it even better. You see, my daily routine now involves using the Instapaper app on the iPad …
Discussion:
MarkArms, New York Observer, Brooks in Beta and The Awl, Thanks:markarms
Dumplings from this Panda!:
Did Digg game its own system to benefit publisher partners? — Digg recently published a blog post titled “Digg's Algorithmic Mystery Tour” on October, 15th. While a Digg blog post is a normal thing, a post about the algorithm was very surprising to me. Why did Digg, which never bothers …
Discussion:
TechCrunch and WebNewser, more at Techmeme »
Nat Worden / Wall Street Journal:
‘Monday Night Football’ Goes Online for Subscribers — Time Warner Cable Inc. and ESPN are planning to serve up a bold cable-TV experiment in making programming available online behind a paywall, starting with this week's “Monday Night Football.” — The two companies say they will make …
Discussion:
Flood Magazine and Digits
Steve Myers / Poynter Online:
George Packer's 5 Tips for Reporting on Anything — The New Yorker's George Packer has written about disaffected voters in Ohio and beleaguered homeowners in Florida; the massive city of Lagos, Nigeria, and the cloistered, oppressed country of Burma. He has described the dangerous predicament …
Discussion:
Romenesko and New York Observer
Paul Thomasch / Reuters:
Comcast launches new web video service, stepping up fight — * Movies, TV shows available from over 90 media partners — Comcast Corp. (CMCSA.O), the largest U.S. cable operator, on Monday rolled out a service that allows its subscribers to watch an array of television shows and movies on a personal computer or laptop.
Discussion:
Media Buyer Planner and MediaPost
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Exclusive: Yahoo Courts Former News Corp. Digital Exec Ross Levinsohn As U.S. Head — He's baaaaaack. — Former Fox Interactive Media President Ross Levinsohn, that is, who is the top candidate to replace Hilary Schneider as Yahoo's U.S. head, according to several sources close to the situation.
Nielsen Wire:
Nielsen estimates 362,000 Britons behind the Times paywall — Matthew Dodd, SVP, Research & Analytics, EMEA — As newspapers grapple with monetizing their content online, a recent Nielsen study found that one in five UK visitors to the Times of London and the Sunday Times websites …
Discussion:
paidContent
Bill Carter / Media Decoder:
Claims of Good Faith, and Bad, in Cable Dispute — The high-stakes feud between the News Corporation and Cablevision reached the point of filing grievances before the Federal Communications Commission on Monday, with each side trying to prove that it had been bargaining in good faith — while charging that the other side had not.
Discussion:
NY Daily News, rbr.com, Company Town, Gothamist and paidContent
Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
No Longer ‘Must-See TV’ — Drop in Thursday's Prime-Time Viewing Could Cost Marketers Weekend Shoppers — Television is losing ground in one of its most lucrative strongholds: Thursday nights. — Fewer people in the U.S. are watching Thursday prime-time TV so far this fall …
Discussion:
MediaPost, Media Buyer Planner and TV Squad
Fred Vogelstein / Epicenter:
Behold, the Next Media Titans: Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon — smith/flickr. Used with gratitude via a Creative Commons license. — Venture capitalist John Doerr is well-known for his hyperbole. Remember his comments about the internet bubble back in the late 1990s?
Discussion:
Noted
Emma Heald / Editors Weblog:
I from the Independent has arrived: affordable, concise, but will it complement or replace its parent paper? — The Independent's new daily i launches today. Billed as the first quality daily to launch in Britain in 25 years, it aims to provide a full news service “in a way that is fully accessible …
Discussion:
Press Gazette, BBC, Bloomberg and Media Week
Julian Lee / Sydney Morning Herald:
Murdoch calls on company troops to fight film PR blockade — Rupert Murdoch and his wife, Wendi, at the Academy Awards. — The world's largest media company, News Corporation, is threatening to deny coverage of movies starring artists who routinely refuse to give interviews to its outlets, one of its senior journalists has revealed.
Discussion:
mediabistro.com and MediaPost
Ian Austen / New York Times:
Globe and Mail Uses Old Weapons in Press War — TORONTO — Like many newspapers in North America, The Globe and Mail rushed out an iPad application. But the technology that the 166-year-old Globe is really staking its future on is not the sort that immediately comes to mind in an increasingly digital world.
Markcuban / blog maverick:
The Rule of Thumb on Disrupting Digital Businesses aka Why The internet is not disrupting TV — There is a widespread misconception that the common thread to industries that the Internet has disrupted is that the disrupted industries were or remain analog and the digital nature of the internet made it impossible for them to keep up.
Discussion:
Podcasting News