Top News:
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
BBC protests at police assault on its Cairo correspondent — The BBC is to make an official protest to the Egyptian authorities after one of its journalists was assaulted by police in Cairo today. — Assad Sawey, the BBC's Cairo correspondent, was deliberately assaulted by police …
Discussion:
BBC, Committee to Protect … and Reporters sans frontières
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Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
TV Crews Struggle in Egyptian Chaos — Television crews in Cairo fought to stay on the air on Friday as protests enveloped major cities in Egypt. — Egyptian authorities adopted various tactics to halt live broadcasts from the capital city, but for the most part networks like CNN and NBC were able to send signals out.
Adam L. Penenberg / Washington Post:
WikiLeaks' Julian Assange: ‘Anarchist,’ ‘agitator,’ ‘arrogant’ and a journalist — The State Department called Julian Assange, the founder of the stateless anti-secrecy organization WikiLeaks, “an anarchist.” Sarah Palin taunted him as “an anti-American operative with blood on his hands.”
Discussion:
The Daily Beast, Gawker, SlashGear, The Firewall and The Huffington Post
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Mark Hosenball / Reuters:
Exclusive: The next generation of WikiLeaks
Exclusive: The next generation of WikiLeaks
Discussion:
The Nation, The Huffington Post, Poynter and Future of Journalism
Arianna Huffington / Prospect Magazine:
If I ruled the world: Arianna Huffington — If I ruled the world, my first goal would be to make it easier to cut through to the facts. At the moment, we are all drowning in spin, smokescreens and lies. Those who perpetrated the two biggest policy disasters of the past ten years …
Andrew Wallenstein / paidContent:
Was Jeff Zucker Really So Bad For NBC Universal? — Today is Jeff Zucker's last day as CEO of NBC Universal (NYSE: GE), where he spent nearly a quarter of a century. Not since Gerald Levin destroyed about $200 billion in shareholder value has a more maligned executive emerged from the media world, which is really saying something.
Discussion:
GigaOM
Greg Sandoval / CNET News:
Spotify exec eyes Apple with suspicion — Do Spotify executives believe Apple had anything to do with their company's inability to make the leap to the United States? — An interview given at the start of this week by Faisal Galaria, Spotify's chief of global business development, sure gave that impression.
Discussion:
GigaOM
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Dylan Stableford / The Wrap:
From Suicide Bombs to ‘Rahmageddon’: A Day in the Life of the Homepage — News moves fast in 2011, almost as fast as the websites that cover it. What it also reveals is that not all digital media is equal. — TheWrap spent one mind-numbing day on Jan. 24 looking at the world's …
Discussion:
WebNewser
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
MoJo's Egypt explainer: future-of-context ideas in action — This week's unrest in Egypt brings new relevance to an old question: How do you cover an event about which most of your readers have little or no background knowledge? — Mother Jones has found one good way to do that.
Melissa Ulbricht / MediaShift Idea Lab:
How WNYC Used Texts from Citizens To Map Snowstorm — The radio station WNYC is creating on-air and online stories using two things that are very familiar to people in the Northeastern United States: mobile phones and snow. — A snowstorm over the holidays was the heaviest December snowfall in six decades.
Discussion:
Future of Journalism
Rachel Rose Hartman / Yahoo! News:
Biden thinks The Onion's spoofs of him are ‘hilarious’ — A mock photo of Vice President Joe Biden washing a Trans-Am shirtless. Strange? Distasteful? Crossing the line? — Not so, Biden says. — “I think it's hilarious,” Biden told Yahoo! in a wide-ranging interview Thursday.
Discussion:
Poynter, The Atlantic Wire, Political Punch, Mediaite, The Wire, Gawker, Indecision Forever, Washington Post and TPMDC
Curt Hopkins / ReadWriteWeb:
Al Jazeera Releases Egypt Coverage Under Creative Commons (UPDATED) — Qatar-based news service Al Jazeera has a long relationship with Creative Commons licensing. Now, for its coverage of the Egyptian uprising, it has released photographs via Flickr and video on a CC license.
Discussion:
Epicenter, VentureBeat, Nieman Journalism Lab and ShortFormBlog, more at Techmeme »
New York Post:
Mag sale Lag-arderes — The Lagardére sale of all its ti tles outside of France to the Hearst Corp. for nearly $1 billion is going to drag on even longer than expected. — On Monday, the Paris-based media giant is expected to announce that the deal won't be finalized until the third quarter of this year.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and New York Magazine
Paul Farhi / Washington Post:
NPR probe of Juan Williams firing questions Ellen Weiss's management style — When Vivian Schiller became NPR's chief executive in early 2009, she knew enough to know that she didn't know very much about producing radio news. For that, Schiller, who formerly headed the New York Times' cable …
Discussion:
Poynter, Gawker and On Media's Blog
Roy Peter Clark / Poynter:
Athletes' real-time tweets reveal raw emotion, changing sports and journalism — Something significant, perhaps paradigmatic, happened last Sunday during the NFC Championship game between the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears. Current and former NFL players published spontaneous commentary …
Discussion:
Editors Weblog