Top News:
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Content Farming: Is Online Media Just a Digital Sweatshop? — The recent sale of Huffington Post to AOL for $315 million has focused a lot of attention on the economics of online media. Many seem concerned that the sale of Arianna Huffington's creation — along with other recent developments …
Discussion:
Scripting News, Newspaper Death Watch, The Daily Dish and Stowe Boyd, Thanks:mathewi
RELATED:
Ryan Chittum / CJR:
AOL's HuffPo Premium Doesn't Mean Much For the NYT — Frederic Filloux has some harsh criticism of The Huffington Post's business model, calling it “a digital sandcastle.” — But what caught my eye was this at the bottom of his piece: … If only this were true. — Alas, his numbers are off there.
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals
Daniel D'Addario / New York Observer:
Come Work for Me, Darling!: Arianna Huffington Sings Siren Song to Journo-Kids
Come Work for Me, Darling!: Arianna Huffington Sings Siren Song to Journo-Kids
Discussion:
Future of Journalism and New York Times
ETHAN BAULEY / Data Central:
HP research shows mainstream media drive Twitter ‘trends’ to a surprising degree — Who gets to determine the big topics of conversation on social media? And how do they do it? Looking to find out, HP researchers recently examined how popular subjects get to be listed among the top ‘trending’ topics on Twitter.
Discussion:
Depth Reporting, VentureBeat, Mashable!, ReadWriteWeb, SAI and Fast Company, Thanks:hpnews
Eric Pfanner / New York Times:
Condé Nast Newsstand Tries Convergence of Technologies — LONDON — A newsstand set to open here next week will sell more than a dozen international editions of Vogue magazine, in languages including English, Russian and Chinese. More than 100 other titles from around the world …
RELATED:
John C Abell / Epicenter:
Wired and The New Yorker for Android Coming This Spring
Wired and The New Yorker for Android Coming This Spring
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals
Wall Street Journal:
Online, Small Voices Become Sparks of Revolution — For most of the last century, the world operated on the big-man theory of politics: Towering personalities were required to drive big changes. — We now seem to have moved into the small-person era of history, in which seemingly insignificant people …
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Eight trends for journalism in 2011: A Nieman Lab talk in Toronto — A couple weeks ago, I had the pleasure of being asked to speak at the Canadian Journalism Foundation's speaker series at the University of Toronto. (I also had the pleasure of being introduced by Nora Young, host of the CBC's excellent program/podcast/site Spark.)
Patrick Smith / TheMediaBriefing:
Weasel words and journalism: It's either true or it isn't — The problems with the use of anonymous sources in the UK media - GrabMore — The CBS journalist Serene Branson has become world-famous, but not in the way she would have liked. — The twice-Emmy nominee was presenting from LA …
Discussion:
Telegraph, CBS Los Angeles, Dave Lee, The Wire and Online Journalism Blog, Thanks:rorybrown
Alex Moore / Death and Taxes:
Radiohead's New Album Addressing Plight of Newspapers? — Radiohead has announced that their new album “The King of Limbs” will be the first ever “newspaper album.” What, exactly, is a newspaper album? — Radiohead became the first truly post-modern band with “OK Computer” …
Discussion:
PC Magazine, Rolling Stone and Time Out Chicago Blogs
RELATED:
Caspar Llewellyn Smith / Guardian:
Will Radiohead's The King of Limbs save the music industry?
Will Radiohead's The King of Limbs save the music industry?
Discussion:
The Register, The Wrap, paidContent:UK, Guardian and hypebot
Time Out Chicago:
Can the News Licensing Group save journalism? An interview with AP CEO Tom Curley — Earlier this month, those following journalism news heard that this year global news network the Associated Press would launch a new agency to allow publishers to license digital news content.
Discussion:
@jayrosen_nyu
John Reinan / MinnPost:
RIP, USA Today — One of the great media innovations of our lifetime is dying. — USA Today launched in 1982 as the first truly national newspaper. With its colorful design and a heavy emphasis on light news, it was often mocked as a shallow “McPaper,” but I've never been among the mockers.
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
First AOL Q1 Luge Update Since HuffPo Acquisition: We've Got Work To Do (No Kidding) — It's rare that we get access to insider information as AOL employees here at TechCrunch HQ, so we have to rely on our mad reporting skills and the strength of our inboxes in order to figure out the goings on over in Dulles and at 770 Broadway.
Discussion:
Guardian, LA Observed and On Media's Blog
Joe Pompeo / Yahoo! News:
Reuters staffers unhappy with union letter likening contract dispute to Egypt uprising — Did the Newspaper Guild of New York go too far in likening a Thomson Reuters contract dispute to the recent social uprising that toppled Egypt's authoritarian government?
Discussion:
Poynter
Guardian:
Who are the investment bankers at the heart of the biggest media deals? — Top five can earn up to £25m in fees each year for their banks — They are the investment bankers at the heart of the biggest British media deals of the past decade, from the sale of the Telegraph newspapers …
New York Observer:
Local Politics Guru Azi Paybarah Returns to The Observer … Azi Paybarah will rejoin the staff of The New York Observer, editor-in-chief Elizabeth Spiers announced today. — “Azi Paybarah is a prolific political reporter and I look forward to the dynamism and energy he'll bring to the Observer newsroom,” she said.
Discussion:
The Wire and FishbowlNY