Top News:
Gregg Kilday / Hollywood Reporter:
Warner Bros. to Rent Movies Digitally on Facebook, Starting With ‘Dark Knight’ … Warner Bros. is turning to Facebook, where it hopes to find an electronic audience interested in digitally renting The Dark Knight. — Warners said Monday that it is the first Hollywood studio to offer movies directly on Facebook.
Discussion:
MediaMemo, GigaOM, The Next Web, Hollywood Reporter, Tech Trader Daily, The Huffington Post, msnbc.com, GMSV, Company Town, All Facebook, Fast Company, Digital Trends, NBC Bay Area, WebProNews, Ubergizmo, Electronista, FierceIPTV, Bloggasm, Geek.com, GalleyCat, The Atlantic Online and Gizmodo, more at Techmeme »
RELATED:
Michael Learmonth / AdAge:
Meet Your New Media Company: Facebook — Social Network Starts Movie Rentals, Threatening Apple, Netflix, Hulu — A big, powerful wild card just entered the movie distribution business. Warner Bros. Entertainment announced today it will begin distributing movies for sale and for rent through Facebook …
Discussion:
Company Town, Media & Entertainment, Lost Remote, Multichannel and Broadcasting & Cable
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Newspapers Hope Readers Will Throw Money Over the Wall — As the financial screws continue to tighten on traditional media companies, more and more are choosing to throw their eggs into the basket labeled “paywall,” despite a conspicuous lack of evidence that erecting barriers to non-paying readers …
Thanks:mathewi
RELATED:
James Fallows / The Atlantic Online:
Learning to Love the (Shallow, Divisive, Unreliable) New Media — EVERYONE FROM PRESIDENT OBAMA TO TED KOPPEL IS BEMOANING A DECLINE IN JOURNALISTIC SUBSTANCE, SERIOUSNESS, AND SENSE OF PROPORTION. BUT THE AUTHOR, A LONGTIME ADVOCATE OF THESE VALUES, TAKES A JOURNEY THROUGH THE DIGITAL-MEDIA WORLD …
Discussion:
@chanders, @scottros and @romenesko, Thanks:jaredbkeller
Brett Pulley / Bloomberg:
Gannett Considers Charging for Online Newspaper Content, CEO Dubow Says — Gannett Co., the owner of 82 newspapers including USA Today, is considering charging for its online content, Chief Executive Officer Craig Dubow said. — The company, which also owns television stations …
Discussion:
Guardian, Poynter, Noted and Gannett Blog
John Shaughnessy / Thomson Reuters:
THOMSON REUTERS LAUNCHES NEXT-GENERATION PROFESSIONAL NEWS OFFERINGS — Reuters powers new services for science, legal, tax and accounting pros — Thomson Reuters, the world's leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals, is launching a suite of news products designed …
Discussion:
paidContent, Talking Biz News and Journalism.co.uk
RELATED:
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
Look out, TMZ!: Reuters to distribute ‘paparazzi-type footage’
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Why Facebook Is Not the Cure For Bad Comments — There's been a lot of discussion recently about Facebook-powered comments, which have been implemented at a number of major blogs and other publishers (including here at GigaOM) over the past couple of weeks.
Discussion:
BuzzMachine, TechCrunch, Stowe Boyd, Howard Lindzon, Engadget, NBC Bay Area, The Huffington Post, Technologizer and SAI
Matthew Boyle / The Daily Caller:
NPR executives caught on tape bashing conservatives and Tea Party, touting liberals — A man who appears to be a senior National Public Radio senior executive, Ron Schiller, has been captured on camera savaging conservatives and the Tea Party movement. — “The current Republican Party …
Discussion:
Media Decoder, Current.org Blog, Weigel, Mediaite, Yahoo! News, The Wire, mediabistro.com, Indecision Forever and FishbowlDC
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Spotify Toots Its Own Horn: One Million Paying Subscribers — Nope, Spotify still isn't in the U.S. yet. But the European streaming music service does have something to announce. It has a million paying subscribers, CEO Daniel Ek writes in a blog post. — Truth in blog posts about blog posts: The number isn't news.
Discussion:
Spotify, VentureBeat, Guardian, paidContent, Music Ally, CNET News, The Next Web, hypebot, GigaOM, louisgray.com and SAI, more at Techmeme »
Michael Oneal / Chicago Tribune:
Tribune Co. bankruptcy nearing finish line — Questions, answers as lawyers for media firm, creditors head to confirmation hearings in Delaware — After 27 months of legal wrangling, Tribune Co. and its creditors are finally headed into what could be the deciding chapter of the company's tangled bankruptcy saga.
Discussion:
Poynter and Media Buyer Planner
Ben Sisario / New York Times:
Mog, the Digital Music Service, Takes Aim at the TV and the Car — The next frontier for digital music is not a tablet or a smartphone, but two items that have been part of everyday life for decades: the car and the television set. — For years, digital music has been confined mostly to traditional computers and phones.
Deena Higgs Nenad / EditorandPublisher.com:
Former AP Reporter Nears Profit After Starting a Paper From Scratch — Former Associated Press reporter Dan Robrish learned many valuable lessons when he started a newspaper from scratch in a small south central Pennsylvania borough one year ago. The most critical: Wrap up personal stuff …
Discussion:
Editors Weblog, J-Source and MediaPost
Damon Kiesow / Poynter:
Publishers must focus on the open Web, not Android, to gain upper hand with Apple — The launch of the Motorola Xoom tablet last month has rekindled hopes that Android tablets may take a bite out of Apple's dominance of mobile publishing. But for media companies, “Apple vs. Android” is a false choice.
Michael Shain / New York Post:
OWN reboots — Oprah's new cable network — which has not been able to get much traction since its blockbuster opening week — is getting the “reboot.” — Network officials have quietly been telling worried advertisers that OWN, Oprah's new channel, will begin reshuffling its lineup …
Discussion:
TVWeek.com and The Wire
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Comments, Video, Push Slate Ad Revs Up 33 Percent In '10 — The Slate Group, The Washington Post (NYSE: WPO) Co.'s online-only unit house Slate.com, The Root.com, and ForeignPolicy.com, says that combined ad revenue from all those sites gained 33 last year.
Discussion:
Poynter
Joseph J. Kolb / EditorandPublisher.com:
Losing the War on Reporting the Mexico Narco Violence — When a 9-year-old student in an El Paso, Texas after-school program asked staff member Abril Holguin if he could call his parents to see where they were, Holguin saw the expression of fear on his face and knew what it meant.
Discussion:
CJR and Editors Weblog
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
New York Times' Kristof: To get social issues on the agenda, get them on the op-ed pages — When Nicholas Kristof travels the country giving talks, the first two questions he gets from the audience almost always come from men. — “This is true even at a women's college …
Discussion:
The News About The News
Claire Cain Miller / New York Times:
YouTube Makes Acquisition to Move Beyond Home Videos — SAN FRANCISCO — YouTube, the video site owned by Google, formally announced on Monday that it had acquired Next New Networks, a Web video production company, in its biggest effort yet to move beyond short, quirky home videos to professionally produced content.
Discussion:
YouTube Blog, Next New Networks, The Wire, paidContent, The Wire, ITworld.com, Softpedia News, eWeek, Fortune, AdExchanger.com, ITProPortal, Electronista, WebProNews, Digital Trends, AdPulp, memeburn, Erictric, Techie Buzz, Pulse2, VentureBeat, Engadget, CNET News, ReadWriteWeb, Online Video News, Fast Company, GigaOM, Mashable! and SAI
RELATED:
Alex Pham / Company Town:
Google's YouTube buys Next New Networks
Google's YouTube buys Next New Networks
Discussion:
TechCrunch, TVWeek.com, Beet.TV, MediaMemo, @pkafka, NYConvergence.com and Beet.TV