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6:15 PM ET, January 5, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
An Electronics Show That Media Companies Dare Not Miss  —  LAS VEGAS — When ESPN announced a high-definition channel nine years ago, its executives barely knew about the Consumer Electronics Association.  —  By the time it was ready to announce a three-dimensional channel last year …
Discussion: NYConvergence.com
RELATED:
Cecilia Kang / Post Tech:
Nielsen: U.S. consumers crave TVs, mobile devices
Discussion: Nielsen Wire
William D. Cohan / Vanity Fair:
Huffing and Puffing  —  Reminiscent of Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Arianna Huffington is being sued by two political consultants, Peter Daou and James Boyce, who claim a critical role in creating her top-ranked Web site, the Huffington Post.  So what exactly happened in the fall of 2004 when Huffington …
RELATED:
Fimoculous.com:
Arianna is the new Zuckerberg  —  A few months ago …
Discussion: Vanity Fair
Martin Belam / currybetdotnet:
RSS dead for newspapers?  Not at The Guardian it isn't  —  Lots of chatter about whether RSS is dying after this (subsequently updated and calmed down) post from Kroc Camen.  Malcolm Coles has weighed in by showing that the subscription numbers to newspaper RSS feeds are way down in Google Reader with …
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
RELATED:
David Folkenflik / NPR:
American Media's True Ideology?  Avoiding One … This is the second in a two-part series looking at ideology in the media.  —  In a media landscape littered with opinionated talk show hosts and ideology-driven websites, strong points of view are hardly tough to find.
Discussion: FishbowlNY, Yahoo! News and Poynter
Mark Leccese / Boston Globe:
The Future of Newspapers: National and Hyperlocal  —  One important but unnoted consequence of the Long Dark Decade of the Newspaper Business is the widening circulation gap between America's three national newspapers — the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and the New York Times — newspapers and its regional dailies.
RELATED:
TheAustralian:   We didn't kill newspapers, says Google
David Carr / New York Times:
Cosmo Goes Beyond the Burqa in the Middle East  —  Like Coke and McDonald's, Cosmo is one U.S. brand that has a significant reach outside American borders.  The magazine, which is published by Hearst Magazines and began printing in 1886, now has 61 international editions appearing in 32 languages …
Anil Dash:
If You Didn't Blog It, It Didn't Happen  —  Clive Thompson's newest Wired piece argues that the flow of short-form messages as we see on Twitter and Facebook is encouraging longer meditations in other media.  I've been thinking about this phenomenon for a while in terms of the impact …
Discussion: Stowe Boyd
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
AOL Goes to Town in Reorg, Closing Men's, Women's Sites  —  Going downhill fast?  AOL's motivational gift to employees.  —  AOL is sometimes criticized for not having a strategy, but that couldn't be more unfair.  Heck, they've got a new one practically every quarter!
Matt Thompson / Poynter:
10 lessons for the future from women in media  —  As 2010 drew to a finish and the end-of-year lists started streaming in, I began to feel that there was something missing from the din of bold predictions and celebrated thinkers in the tech and media world: female voices.
New York Post:
Smear disappears  —  Who is behind the apparently concerted campaign to smear The New Yorker's Jane Mayer?  —  For several weeks, the Daily Caller, a conservative Web site — co-founded by Tucker Carlson and Neil Patel, a former aide to former vice president Dick Cheney …
Emma Barnett / Telegraph:
Spotify 2010 US launch ‘delayed by labels’ high cash demands'  —  Spotify's long-awaited 2010 US launch failed because the major record labels demanded “extremely high cash advances”.  —  Spotify until recently has claimed it will launch stateside by the end of 2010.
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
Reports: Newsweek Staff Gutting to Continue With Buyouts  —  After multiple rounds of layoffs and Daily Beast merger  —  Between financial instability and a change in ownership, Newsweek has lost a number of its top journalists over the past year.  But now talk is spreading …
Discussion: FishbowlNY
Kristine Lowe / Journalism.co.uk:
Quora: a tech journalist's utopia, but what does it mean for journalism at large?  —  “Feels like quora.com just went viral today after months of quiet.  Are others seeing lots of new ‘follows’ as the world checks it out?,” Harward Law professor Jonathan Zittrain tweeted last night.
Discussion: Guardian
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
BBC must refocus - Attenborough  —  Veteran presenter says in New Statesman interview that corporation has ‘strayed from the straight and narrow’  —  Sir David Attenborough, the face of the BBC's landmark natural history programming, has said the corporation's “sails need to be trimmed” …
David Kaplan / paidContent:
VC Money Keeps Pouring In For Ad Targeters: Turn Raises $20 Million  —  Turn is the latest ad tech firm to greet the new year with a whopping sum of venture capital.  The Silicon Valley-based company has raised $20 million in a fourth round funding, bringing its total raised to $57 million in the past five years.
John Del Signore / Gothamist:
Tom Robbins On Why He Quit the Voice, And Journalism's Plight  —  Yesterday was a sad day for the once-illustrious Village Voice, which lost two of its legendary muckraking reporters, Wayne Barrett and Tom Robbins.  Barrett, who has been with the paper since the Koch administration …
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Why ProPublica is publishing web ads — and what that means for the nonprofit outfit's funding future  —  Check out ProPublica's website today, and you might notice — along with blog posts, donation buttons, links to special projects, and the kind of deep-dive investigative journalism …
RELATED:
ProPublica:
Why We're Publishing Advertising, and Where We Stand on Funding
Discussion: eMedia Vitals and Poynter
Ruth Teichroeb / Safety Net:
Eighteen Months Later: What's happened to Seattle P-I journalists  —  Six months after Hearst shut down the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, I surveyed my former colleagues to find out how they were faring.  Most were still looking for work, reeling from the shock of losing their jobs in the depths …
Discussion: Guardian and Poynter
 
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 More News: 
Jim / Gannett Blog:
How furloughs helped spur $4M in exec bonuses
Eric Wilson / New York Times:
eBay Takes a Page From the Glossies
Wall Street Journal:
The Year Ahead for Media: Digital or Die
Discussion: Company Town
Reid Pillifant / New York Observer:
Meet the Press! …
John Plunkett / Guardian:
Sky Atlantic to launch next month
Tara Bahrampour / Washington Post:
'Daily Show'-type satire finds an audience in Iran, and a big enemy
Cory Bergman / Lost Remote:
Today Show experiments with augmented reality
 Earlier Picks: 
Steven Kurutz / Speakeasy:
A Journalism Prof's Thoughts on Preparing Tomorrow's Reporters
Cory Bergman / Lost Remote:
CES: Miso checks into funding from Google, Hearst
Yinka Adegoke / Reuters:
News Corp pay deal for Joel Klein worth over $4 mln
Discussion: Hollywood Reporter
Reynolds Journalism Institute / RJI:
The Transition - creating a new copy editor from the ashes …
Discussion: Poynter
Robert Niles / Online Journalism Review:
Journalism's problem isn't the Internet or advertising; it's attitude
Nick Summers / New York Observer:
Inside the Media Hiring Bubble
Discussion: Poynter, LA Observed and The Corsair
Choire Sicha / The Awl:
You're Being Gamed  —  Gabe Zicherman, the author of Game-Based …
Nieman Reports:
Gay Talese: On What Endures in Sports Writing Amid Change