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9:30 PM ET, January 19, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Relax, Everyone: Apple Isn't Bending Its Rules for Playboy  —  Hugh Hefner got a little over-excited.  About the iPad, that is.  Image via Wikipedia  —  Playboy founder Hugh Hefner touched off some excitement with a series of ebullient tweets yesterday, announcing that current and past issues …
RELATED:
Vlad Savov / Engadget:
Playboy Magazine coming to iPad in its uncensored form in March …
Joe Pompeo / Yahoo! News:
Uncensored Playboy to hit iPad in March, says Hefner (The Cutline)
Discussion: The Daily Caller and Gizmodo
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
One Down: Spotify Signs Sony to U.S. Deal  —  This doesn't get them into the States, but it gets them a lot closer: Music service Spotify has finally signed with Sony for a U.S. distribution deal.  Multiple sources tell me the deal, which has been very close since last fall, is now closed.
Discussion: The Next Web, Mashable and ReadWriteWeb
RELATED:
Johnnie L. Roberts / The Wrap:
Executive Musical Chairs Won't Save Broken Record Business
Nat Ives / AdAge:
Why It's Getting Harder to Find a Good Magazine Newsstand  —  Problem Partly Began When Convenience Stores Dropped Skin Titles  —  NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Magazines had better hope they get a nice prominent digital newsstand on the tablets flooding the market, because their bricks-and-mortar retail outlets are continuing to disappear.
Discussion: Poynter
Ken Doctor / Newsonomics:
The Demise of Lean Dean Singleton and the Rise of Private Equity  —  Dean Singleton worked the deals in corners of the U.S. for decades, building from scratch a major chain, that by circulation (though, not revenue) is probably the second largest in the country.
RELATED:
Henry Blodget / Clusterstock:
THE GOLDEN AGE OF NEWS: Mainstream Media Staffers Agog At Huge Salaries Huffpo And Daily Beast Are Paying Big-Name Stars  —  Oh, the wailing!  —  A year or two ago, you couldn't spend five minutes online without seeing some mainstream media scribe bemoaning the death of journalism and the high-paying, cushy old jobs that went with it.
Discussion: New York Observer
Associated Press:
Greenblatt Set To Craft NBC Prime-Time Strategy  —  NBC, the peacock network, should get a full-scale preening at the hands of its new entertainment chief once the Comcast Corp. takeover is complete.  —  Comcast has said that it's appointing Bob Greenblatt, the programming executive …
RELATED:
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Nonprofit news orgs see validation, new funding in Comcast-NBC merger
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
In Comcast-NBC Conditions, A Victory for Bloomberg
MediaShift Idea Lab:
How Can We ‘Gamify’ the News Experience?  —  One of the biggest emerging conversations over the past year in Silicon Valley is around “gamification.”  Simply put, this is the idea of applying game mechanics, particularly those found in videogames, to all sorts of non-game experiences.
Jay Yarow / SAI: Silicon Alley Insider:
AOL Is Launching A Flipboard-Killer, “Editions”  —  AOL is getting ready to launch its own iPad magazine called “Editions.”  —  The tag line for the magazine is “The Magazine That Reads You.”  —  We don't know much about it, but it sounds like it will be an app like Flipboard, using your interests to figure out what you like.
Ryan Chittum / CJR:
The Dead Source Who Keeps on Giving  —  Fortune joins the WSJ in putting Jerome York on the record after his death  —  Back in March, I noticed The Wall Street Journal appearing to burn an off-the-record source a few days after he died.  —  Now it's Fortune's turn to put the same source on the record posthumously.
Journalism.org:
A SPECIAL REPORT ON THE MEDIA AND THE TUCSON SHOOTING  —  The aftermath of the January 8 shooting spree in Tucson dominated the American news media last week in a way events rarely do: the tragedy registered as the third-biggest story in a single week since PEJ began tracking coverage in January 2007.
Lois Beckett / Nieman Journalism Lab:
1.4 million fans can't be wrong: NPR's Facebook page  —  “They swear like sailors, but boy, they're smart.”  —  That's how NPR strategist Andy Carvin described the 1.4 million fans who comment and share stories through NPR's Facebook page.  The page — originally created by an NPR enthusiast from the UK …
Lois Beckett / Nieman Journalism Lab:
“Gee, you guys are spending an awful lot of money”: The Bay Citizen editor on funding quality news  —  Seven months into its bid to reinvent the metro newspaper, The Bay Citizen, the San Francisco-based nonprofit news site, has so far raised a total of $14.5 million in philanthropic gifts …
Glynnis MacNicol / The Wire:
WHOA: Piers Morgan Beats Fox's Sean Hannity In 9pm Demo  —  CNN may have a hit on their hands.  —  Early ratings numbers from Nielsen for Piers Morgan's second CNN show with Howard Stern reveal that (as he promised) he beat competitor Sean Hannity in the ever-coveted 25-54 demo: 551,000- 506,000.
Nick Summers / New York Observer:
The Crisis at the Front of the Book  —  On a Tuesday night some weeks ago, at a jam-packed book party at Sidecar, the handsome upstairs space next to P.J. Clarke's on East 55th Street, Hugo Lindgren was leaning on the bar next to his deputy.  The new editor of The New York Times Magazine …
Discussion: Poynter
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Times Names New Metro Editor  —  Carolyn Ryan, who helped lead The New York Times to a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the downfall of Eliot Spitzer when he was governor of New York, has been named the paper's metropolitan editor.  —  Ms. Ryan, 46, has worked at The Times for three and half years.
Discussion: Gawker
Nellie Andreeva / Deadline.com:
Weinstein Co. Plans To Launch TV Division With Meryl Poster In Talks To Run It  —  EXCLUSIVE: Harvey and Bob Weinstein are plotting a big re-entry into television and are talking to an old pal, producer Meryl Poster, to run the new Weinstein Co. TV arm.  Poster worked with the Weinsteins …
Discussion: Company Town
Alicia Shepard / NPR Blogs:
How NPR's Giffords Mistake Hurt The Families  —  This story was updated at 4:31 p.m. to make clear that after NPR correspondent Ted Robbins told NPR's newsdesk that Giffords had not died, NPR changed its reporting.  —  I've since learned what real, excruciating pain NPR triggered …
Discussion: AOL News, Runnin' Scared and Poynter
Alex Weprin / TVNewser:
Suzanne Malveaux Tapped to Anchor ‘CNN Newsroom’  —  CNN has tapped White House correspondent Suzanne Malveaux to anchor the 11 AM to 1 PM block of “CNN Newsroom.”  Malveaux will start her new assignment January 31, and will relocate to CNN's headquarters in Atlanta.
Nick O'Neill / All Facebook:
The Washington Post Enters The Facebook Advertising Business  —  This week The Washington Post formally announced the launch of SocialCode, the latest company to enter the hot market of third-party Facebook advertising solutions.  —  The social network connection for The Washington Post is deep rooted.
Annys Shin / Washington Post:
Blogger aims to chronicle every D.C. homicide victim  —  On the morning of Nov. 15, Laura Norton Amico found herself penned inside a scrum of journalists who had packed a room at D.C. Superior Court for a glimpse of the lead suspect in one of Washington's highest-profile murder cases: the 2001 killing of federal intern Chandra Levy.
Discussion: Poynter
Mark Stephens Warrior / Media News International:
Robert Bakish Named President and CEO of Viacom International Media Networks  —  New York : Viacom Inc. has announced that it has appointed Robert Bakish to the newly created position of President and CEO of Viacom International Media Networks.  —  Mr. Bakish was previously President of MTV Networks International.
The Wrap:
Will Tribune Co. Sell its Newspapers Post-Bankruptcy?  —  What will be the fate of the Tribune Company's flagship newspapers when the giant media company emerges from bankruptcy later this year?  —  While a judge is expected to approve a reorganization plan in March to clear away …
Anthony Kaufman / Speakeasy:
Sundance 2011: 7 Film Companies To Watch … Sundance is mostly known as a film “festival,” but the event is equally a marketplace—the most important in the world, in fact, for the buying and selling of American independent films.  While the indie film business has gone through a cooling period …
Discussion: The Wrap and Online Video News
Gabriel Sherman / GQ:
The Worldwide Leader in Dong Shots  —  With his leering coverage of Brett Favre's penis (allegedly!), Rex Ryan's foot fetish, and the surprising sex life of ESPN, A. J. Daulerio has turned Deadspin.com into the raunchiest, funniest, and most controversial sports site on the Web.  But at what cost to his soul?
 
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 More News: 
Jim Edwards / BNET:
Julia Allison's Campaign to Rewrite History Is Coming Along Nicely
Amy Wicks / WWD Media Headlines:
David Pecker: Chairman of the Tabloids
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Bloomberg Explains Company-Foundation Crossover, Sort Of
Media Week:
Hachette to close teen magazine Sugar after 16 years
Justin Ellis / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Seeking Alpha's Premium Partnership Program and the evolution of paying for content
Discussion: Felix Salmon
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Erik Huggers to leave BBC for Intel
Katherine Rosman / Wall Street Journal:
How Adam Got @Adam and Became Cool Online
Discussion: Gawker
James Rainey / Los Angeles Times:
On the Media: Groupon experiences growing pains with customers, merchants
 Earlier Picks: 
Damon Kiesow / Poynter:
Why the Orange County Register saw record mobile traffic last weekend
Joe Mullin / paidContent:
After 200 Lawsuits Against Sites, Righthaven Targets Online Commenters
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
With $2 Million In Fresh Funding, FanBridge Buys DamnTheRadio
Chris Roush / Talking Biz News:
Moore named NYC bureau chief for “Marketplace”
Gillian Reagan / Bookish:
Editor, Agent and Author Betsy Lerner on What's Wrong with Writers
Matt Shatz / paidContent:
Why Online Retailers Will Squeeze Out Publishers In The Book Business
Discussion: TeleRead
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
Publisher asks journalists not to comment on Obama novel
Discussion: Poynter, Mixed Media, Scocca and GalleyCat