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5:30 PM ET, November 10, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Nick Summers / New York Observer:
Blank Slate: Jacob Weisberg Was a Web Pioneer.  But He Doesn't Much Care for What Works on the Web Now.  Can Slate Recover?  —  Slate, the Web site, is 14 years old, an eternity on the Internet.  During that span, its New York offices have moved nine times.
Discussion: The Awl and Romenesko
RELATED:
Jim Romenesko / Romenesko:
Weisberg: NYO wrong; Slate's ‘going gangbusters’  —  Slate Group editor-in-chief Jacob Weisberg's note to staff about today's New York Observer story  —  You may have seen the story about Slate that's up on the New York Observer website today.  I wanted to take a minute to respond …
Discussion: Mediaite and New York Observer
Nick Summers / New York Observer:
Slate's Traffic Is Gangbusters, Except When It's Not  —  Slate Group chairman Jacob Weisberg wrote a memo to his staff today in response to this week's Observer cover story, a look at how the 14-year-old site is faring against new and ferocious competition.  He takes exception to our piece …
Joe Flint / Company Town:
Lou Dobbs joining Fox Business Network  —  Just about a year to the day that he left CNN, Lou Dobbs is returning to cable news, this time as host of his own show on News Corp.'s Fox Business Network.  —  Fox Business Network is expected to announce that it has signed Dobbs as early as Wednesday afternoon.
Ryan Kearney / TBD All News:
Why did Gawker publish, then retract, a gruesome murder photo?  —  Recently, Gawker did something unusual: It removed a photo that was upsetting people.  The photo showed the body of Christopher Jusko, a 21-year-old graffiti artist who was stabbed to death in New York's East Village on Oct. 25.
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Schools Chief Has Much in Common With Boss  —  Cathleen P. Black earned a reputation in publishing as a tough-minded chief executive who never left her employees guessing what she wanted.  A student of management, she wrote a book about strategies for success in the corporate world.
RELATED:
John Heilemann / New York Magazine:
Joel Klein on Rupert Murdoch, Cathleen Black, and Being a Jerk
Discussion: All Things Digital and MinOnline
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
NY Times Editor: Our Readers Don't Know How Much They Pay  —  Gerald Marzorati, center, with Marc Jacobs (L) and Paul Krugman.  Image by Getty Images via @daylife  —  The New York Times cultivates an image as the preferred read of the intellectual elite, but at least one of the paper's higher-ups seems …
Discussion: Romenesko
Alan Rusbridger / Poynter Online:
Openness, Collaboration Key to New Information Ecosystem  —  In 2009 you could smell the fear.  As banks crashed and the recession hit, even the grandest media companies trembled a little.  We had all known for some time that the revolution we're all living through would at some stage get really tough.
ProPublica:
Read the Leaked P.R. Plan to Spin Our Dialysis Investigation  —  Update (2:39 p.m.): Kidney Care Partners released an official statement.  —  The umbrella group Kidney Care Partners (KCP), an advocacy and lobbying organization for dialysis providers, patient groups, drug companies and others …
Discussion: MinnPost and LA Observed
RELATED:
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Eisner's Studio and AOL Pair Up for Web Series  —  In a deal to be announced Wednesday, Michael D. Eisner's Web studio, Vuguru, will produce half a dozen scripted Web video series for AOL.  —  The partnership is the latest attempt by AOL, which has been struggling, to infuse its home page and its Web sites with original video.
Post by Venkat / Technology & Marketing Law Blog:
Twitter Clarifies Usage Rules, but AFP Still Claims Unbridled Right to Use Content Posted to “Twitter/TwitPic”  —  Twitter recently issued new guidelines regarding use of the “Twitter” and “Tweet” marks, and use of the underlying tweets by users and third parties as well: “Guidelines for Use of the Twitter Trademark.”
Discussion: ReadWriteWeb
Robin Sloan / Snarkmarket:
Escape from Thunderdome  —  Here's the tick-tock: Marc Ambinder writes a terrific, thought-provoking post titled I Am a Blogger No Longer.  Here at Snarkmarket, it strikes us all so well and so deeply that we decide to dive in:  — Matt goes first, and he talks about what “ego-driven reporting” might or might not be.
RELATED:
Tim Carmody / Snarkmarket:   Blogger, Reporter, Author
Matt Thompson / Snarkmarket:   Was Marc Ambinder actually a blogger?
Media Week:
‘Electricity in the newsroom’: the rise and rise of the iPad  —  The iPad has brought the greatest excitement to the media industry since the dotcom boom.  Alexandra Jardine reports how newspaper and magazine publishers are swelling audiences and ad revenue through launching apps on the revolutionary new platform
Jay Rosen / Pressthink:
The View from Nowhere: Questions and Answers  —  “American journalism is dumber than most journalists, who often share my sense of absurdity about these practices.  A major reason we have a practice less intelligent than its practitioners is the prestige that the View from Nowhere still claims...”
Discussion: The Politico
Joe Pompeo / Yahoo! News:
DealBook relaunch triggered N.Y. Times blog shutdown  —  Something strange happened Tuesday night on the New York Times' website: All 58 of its blogs went dark.  —  “We're working hard to get our blogs back up and running,” the Times tweeted around 7 p.m. “Stay tuned.”
Media Week:
The Times and Sunday Times attract 75% of online audience from UK  —  News International's paywall around sites for The Times and The Sunday Times has created a more affluent and more engaged digital audience, with a significantly larger UK bias than any other newspaper, according to chief marketing officer Katie Vanneck.
New York Post:
Camera-ready  —  Tweet  —  Celebrity chef Rachael Ray is tapping Liz Vaccariello, a former editor-in-chief of Prevention with a made-for-TV smile, to be the new editor-in-chief of her namesake magazine, as it gears up to fight a slew of rivals.  —  The foodie wars are increasingly going multimedia.
David Schlesinger / Reuters:
Our need to be in the midst of danger  —  Below is the keynote speech Editor-in-Chief David Schlesinger delivered today to the International News Safety Institute  —  Death came screaming out of the sky on July 12, 2007.  —  Two Apache helicopter gunships operating more than 500 metres away …
Jon Friedman / MarketWatch:
ESPN's Skipper: iPad is not print's savior  —  Commentary: It's all about finding medium's best use of content  —  NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — John Skipper understands the iPad — and a good deal of ESPN's future rests in his hands.  —  Skipper, ESPN executive vice president for content …
Discussion: Poynter Online
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Playboy Goes Geo-Local With Scout App, Even as Iconic Media Company Attempts Turnaround  —  How about some check-ins at the Playboy Mansion?  —  That's not exactly on the menu for a new mobile application being launched by the iconic adult-oriented media company today, called Scout (although BoomTown wishes it were).
Discussion: New York Observer
Amy Garmer / KnightComm:
Digital and Media Literacy: A Plan of Action  —  The Knight Commission recognized that people need tools, skills and understanding to use information effectively, and that successful participation in the digital age entails two kinds of skills sets: digital literacy and media literacy.
Discussion: KnightBlog
ROSS KENNETH URKEN / New York | Guest of a Guest:
Blogging Makes Joan Didion Uncomfortable  —  When we caught up with New Journalism Joan Didion at yesterday's luncheon at the 21 Club for “The King's Speech,” she had a few words for us about this so-called blogging fad.  —  This giant figure in non-fiction whose Slouching Toward Bethlahem …
Discussion: New York Observer
Robert Hernandez / Online Journalism Review:
Journalists ‘cautiously pessimistic’ about Patch  —  By Robert Hernandez: The topic of AOL's Patch has been on journalists' minds before I asked the question at the Online News Association conference in D.C.  —  It has sparked debate and open conversation about whether this hyperlocal venture …
Discussion: WebNewser
 
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 More News: 
Lauren Kirchner / CJR:
Some Stories are “Un-Webbable”  —  The Washington Post's Mark Luckie …
Laura McGann / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Talking Points Memo's first developer talks startup life …
Leon Neyfakh / New York Observer:
David Rosenthal Puts on His Penguin Suit
Ethan Klapper / 10,000 Words:
6 innovative uses of Tumblr by newsrooms
CJR:
Launch Pad: Portland, Oregon
Chloe Malle / New York Observer:
Nora Sticks Her Neck Out: The Author Brings Her Philosophy of Divorce
Discussion: Canadian Press
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
When The News Lets Everyone Really Participate, It Changes The Way News Works
Simon Rogers / Guardian:
How Canada became an open data and data journalism powerhouse
 Earlier Picks: 
Jean-Paul Marthoz / Committee to Protect Journalists:
In France, is Sarkozy spying on journalists?
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Repeat After Me: Investors Are Never the Story
Brian Deagon / Investor's Business Daily:
Blowing Some Hot Air Works For Some Blogs
David Kaplan / paidContent:
DailyCandy Wants To Make ‘Deals’ With Local Marketers
Associated Press:
Tribune Co. asks court to approve $43M in bonuses
MediaShift:
Inside the NewsHour's Multi-Platform Election Night Bedlam
Discussion: Poynter Online
 

 
From Techmeme:

Ryan Morrison / Tom's Guide:
Microsoft researchers introduce VASA-1, an AI model that creates a realistic talking face video from a portrait photo and an audio file, in research preview

Dwarkesh Patel / Dwarkesh Podcast:
Q&A with Mark Zuckerberg on Llama 3, buying H100 GPUs for Reels, AGI, energy constraints, dangers of open source, the metaverse, Meta's custom silicon, and more

Raffaele Huang / Wall Street Journal:
Apple removes WhatsApp and Threads from its App Store in China, saying it was ordered to do so by China's cyberspace officials citing national security concerns

 
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