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1:40 PM ET, March 9, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Mark Memmott / NPR:
NPR CEO Vivian Schiller Resigns  —  This follows yesterday's news that then-NPR fundraiser Ron Schiller (no relation) was videotapped slamming conservatives and questioning whether NPR needs federal funding during a lunch with men posing as members of a Muslim organization …
RELATED:
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
NPR president Vivian Schiller resigns  —  Romenesko Misc.  —  NPR board chairman Dave Edwards says CEO and president Vivian Schiller's resignation was accepted “with understanding, genuine regret and great respect for her leadership of NPR these past two years.”
New York Times:
Facing Lawmakers' Fire, NPR Sees New Setback  —  Already under fire from Republicans who want to strip its federal financing, NPR was forced into damage-control mode on Tuesday after the release of a video that showed one of its fund-raising executives repeatedly criticizing Republicans and Tea Party supporters.
Mark Memmott / NPR:
In Video: NPR Exec Slams Tea Party, Questions Need For Federal Funds  —  NPR's soon-to-be-departing senior vice president for fundraising Ron Schiller is seen and heard on a videotape released this morning telling two men who were posing as members of a fictitious Muslim Action Education Center that:
David Folkenflik / @davidfolkenflik:
Discussion: The Huffington Post and Fox Nation
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
NPR ‘appalled’ by former exec's comments
Matthew Boyle / The Daily Caller:
NPR executives caught on tape bashing conservatives and Tea Party, touting liberals
Austin Carr / Fast Company:
Personalized iPad Magazine Zite Learns As You Read, Challenges Flipboard  —  Have you ever created a Genius playlist on iTunes or set up a station on Pandora?  Just plug in one song, and you instantly hear music that matches your tastes.  Think of Zite, the free personalized iPad magazine …
RELATED:
Katherine Boehret / All Things Digital:
A Digital “Magazine” With One Subscriber [The Digital Solution]  —  Each morning, the President of the United States gets briefed on the day's news by some of the smartest advisers around.  The rest of us aren't so lucky.  We have to sift through newspapers, magazines and websites to find out what's going on around us.
Neal Ungerleider / Fast Company:
Al Jazeera Launching English-Language Children's Channel  —  Al Jazeera isn't just news.  Their next project?  An English-language childrens' edutainment network on American TV by 2012.  —  Al Jazeera's banking that its newest project—an English-language children's channel …
Discussion: Mediaite
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Lessons of the Like Log: The big story and the nuances of shareability  —  The Internet may run on love; thanks to Facebook, though, it also runs on like.  Or, more specifically, on Like.  —  That's made clear in a collection of research, released last night, that traces the Facebook effect when it comes to online news.
Kat Stoeffel / New York Observer:
Drilling Down: Is ‘The Times’ Giving Proper Credit?  —  Who do you have to frack to get some credit around here?  —  That's what we're wondering after a recent New York Times series on the latest hot-button environmental issue—hydraulic fracturing, a.k.a. “fracking.”
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
TV.com Head Anthony Soohoo Leaves CBS  —  More bodies moving around at CBS' digital division: Last week, the broadcaster bought Clicker.com for a reported $100 million, and put its CEO Jim Lanzone in charge of CBS Interactive.  Today, CBS Interactive entertainment head Anthony Soohoo says he's leaving.
Peter Beaumont / Guardian:
Libya regime treating journalists like idiots - but ones who are useful to them  —  At surreal press conferences in Tripoli reporters hear scripted praise for Muammar Gaddafi while being told black is white, attack is retreat and ‘the colonial English’ are fomenting conspiracy
Amy Chozick / Wall Street Journal:
Television's Senior Moment  —  As Audiences Get Older, So Do the Characters— And Ads Cost More  —  In CBS's new cop show “Blue Bloods,” Tom Selleck, at the age of 66, plays a New York police commissioner.  Kathy Bates, at 62, snagged the lead role in NBC's legal series “Harry's Law.”
Verne G. Kopytoff / Bits:
Hoping to Be the Netflix for the Sundance Crowd  —  A new Web site focused on independent films is hoping to become Netflix for the Sundance Film Festival crowd.  —  Fandor, introduced on Wednesday, is a subscription service with a library of 2,500 films like “Dogtooth,” …
Discussion: Online Video News
Martin Langeveld / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The flip side of black hat SEO: If your news site publishes paid links, you risk suffering Google's wrath  —  Last month, the New York Times outed retailer JCPenney for engaging in “black hat optimization” — the practice of buying or placing links designed primarily to improve a site's standing in Google search results.
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
Craigslist's Newmark joins Center for Public Integrity board  —  Romenesko Misc.  —  Executive director William Buzenberg calls Craig Newmark “an iconic visionary who saw the community- empowerment potential of the Internet early on.”  The Craigslist founder, he says …
Sarah Kessler / Mashable!:
Al Jazeera Launches Twitter Dashboard To Track Uprisings in Egypt, Yemen, Libya & Bahrain  —  Qatar-based news outlet Al Jazeera has launched a Twitter dashboard to illustrate tweets about uprisings and revolutions around the world.  —  The dashboard tallies the daily number of tweets …
MediaShift:
Why Are Hispanics Missing in Leadership at Media Companies?  —  Business content on MediaShift is sponsored by the weekend MA in Public Communication at American University.  Designed for working professionals, the program is suited to career changers and public relations or social marketing professionals seeking career advancement.
Kat Stoeffel / New York Observer:
Among the Assisterati: Bottoms Up with the Highbrow Bottom Feeders  —  On a Tuesday evening not long ago, a group of publishing assistants in their early 20s gathered in a well-appointed apartment on the West Side of Manhattan.  —  “Assistants: Meet the person on the other end of the telephone,” the email had said.
 
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 More News: 
Hana N. Rouse / The Harvard Crimson:
Frank Rich Discusses Modern Journalism
Alexandra Cheney / Speakeasy:
How Does Twitter Verify Celebrity Accounts?
Ron Mwangaguhunga / eMedia Vitals:
Entertainment Weekly's smart partnership with GetGlue
Discussion: Search Engine Land
Associated Press:
Supermom Blogger Kelly Oxford Has Book Deal
Daniel D'Addario / New York Observer:
What Does ‘The Atlantic’ Know About Its Own Aggregation?
Evgeny Morozov / Guardian:
Facebook and Twitter are just places revolutionaries go | Evgeny Morozov
Discussion: Mark Follman
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Huffpo-Enabled Layoffs Expected By Friday at AOL
Discussion: mediabistro.com
 Earlier Picks: 
Meg James / Los Angeles Times:
‘Tosh.0’ turns Internet videos into laughs, cash for Comedy Central
Georg Szalai / Hollywood Reporter:
Cable Executives Vow to Stem Subscriber Losses
Discussion: FierceIPTV
Damon Kiesow / Poynter:
Publishers must focus on the open Web, not Android, to gain upper hand with Apple
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Newspapers Hope Readers Will Throw Money Over the Wall
Discussion: Free Press, Thanks:mathewi