Top News:
TechCrunch:
John Montorio Joins HuffPo: Journalism vs Churnalism Battle Rages On — TechCrunch has learned that John Montorio has been named Culture and Entertainment Editor for Aol's Huffington Post Media Group content division. — Montorio is a 30-year veteran of two of the country's biggest newspapers …
Discussion:
On Media's Blog, Bloggasm, The Wire, FishbowlNY, L.A. Times Tech Blog, SAI, The Huffington Post and LA Observed, more at Techmeme »
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Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Layoffs Are Last Week's AOL News. This Week: “Giving Back” — Last week's AOL news: Major layoffs in the wake of the Huffington Post acquisition. — This week's AOL news: All sorts of let's-move-ahead-and-get-on-with- it pronouncements from CEO Tim Armstrong and content head Arianna Huffington.
Discussion:
Mixed Media, New York Observer, SAI, PC Magazine and Marketing Pilgrim, more at Techmeme »
Gabriel Sherman / New York Magazine:
Going Rogue on Ailes Could Leave Palin on Thin Ice — Before Sarah Palin posted her infamous “Blood Libel” video on Facebook on January 12, she placed a call to Fox News chairman Roger Ailes. In the wake of the Tucson massacre, Palin was fuming that the media was blaming her heated rhetoric …
Discussion:
The Politico, Mediaite, The Atlantic Wire, FishbowlNY, The Wire, The Huffington Post, TVNewser, The Raw Story and Gawker
Russell Adams / Wall Street Journal:
British Publisher Buys Mental Floss — A decade after he flouted publishing's grim economic realities and launched a weekly news magazine in the U.S., British-born magazine publisher Felix Dennis is betting on another long-shot. — The 63-year-old Mr. Dennis has agreed to buy Mental Floss …
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Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
The News, in Bright Bits — Somewhere along the line, utility became a bad word at news magazines. And that's where The Week saw an opening. — While magazines like Time and Newsweek published heavy essays, distinguished guest columnists and artful photo spreads, The Week embraced magazine journalism …
Discussion:
Poynter
Frank Rich / New York Times:
Confessions of a Recovering Op-Ed Columnist — THE first political columnist I ever encountered, after a fashion, was Walter Lippmann. It happened on a snowy afternoon when I was a kid of 11 or 12 growing up in Washington during the J.F.K. years. My wallet had somehow slipped out of my pocket …
Discussion:
The Wire
Jennifer Preston / New York Times:
When Unrest Stirs, Bloggers Are Already in Place — As the protests spread across Tunisia for weeks, many international news organizations scrambled to cover the unrest just before President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali fled on Jan. 14, ending 23 years of authoritarian rule. But Amira al-Hussaini was all over the story.
Discussion:
Media Decoder
Amir Efrati / Wall Street Journal:
Google to Help Broker Video Ads — Google Inc., trying to become a middleman for selling video ads on the Internet, will soon test a service that matches advertisers with website publishers, including Google's own YouTube video site. — The Silicon Valley company is creating …
Discussion:
AdExchanger.com
Rick Edmonds / Poynter:
State of the News Media 2011: New revenues have not arrived, but new challenges have — A year ago, co-authoring the “State of the News Media” chapter on newspapers, I thought 2010 would be a year of rebound — and a test of whether newspapers would reinvest in “developing new lines of business and rebuilding skimpy news reports.”
Discussion:
Yahoo! News, Free Press and News for Digital Journalists
Jenna Wortham / New York Times:
Founder of a Provocative Web Site Forms a New Outlet — AUSTIN, Tex. — For most entrepreneurs, running a Web site that is rife with pornography and frequently criticized as a menace to society would not be considered a résumé booster. Many venture capitalists would head in the opposite direction.
Discussion:
Fortune
Deborah Potter / NewsLab:
Local TV news bounces back — After two grim years, the state of local television news is much improved, thank you. That's the bottom line of the chapter I wrote for this year's State of the News Media report from the Project for Excellence in Journalism, released today.
Liz Shannon Miller / GigaOM:
Will Girl Walks Into a Bar Lead Indie Films to the Web? — The idea that Girl Walks Into a Bar, an independent feature with a Hollywood-friendly cast and a $1 million dollar budget, is “The First Major Motion Picture Made For The Internet,” could be up for debate.
Discussion:
ArtsBeat
Peter Preston / Guardian:
Does the i have it for quality journalism? — Small, cheap and modest, the mini-Independent may be proving a good idea — One figure stands out from a generally grisly set of national newspaper circulation statistics in February. It's not unexpected: Indy people have been bragging …
Jemima Kiss / Guardian:
Flipboard: game-changer or just a fad? — The founder of the social magazine application, Mike McCue, on its relationship with publishers, its funding, and his love of Apple — A great interviewer makes so much difference to a panel, as proven by Kara Swisher of AllThingsD interviewing Flipboard founder Mike McCue.
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals
Aljazeera:
Al Jazeera staffer killed in Libya — Cameraman Ali Hassan Al Jaber was returning to eastern city of Benghazi from filing report when he was shot and killed. — An Al Jazeera cameraman has been killed in what appears to have been an ambush near the rebel-held city of Benghazi in eastern Libya.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Clusterstock, Committee to Protect …, Guardian and Global Voices in English
Arthur S. Brisbane / New York Times:
A Cocktail Party With Readers — EARLY adopters at The Times boldly went there four years ago. I made the move only in the last few weeks — to Twitter, that is, that curiously named domain where Middle Eastern revolutions erupt and Charlie Sheen, too. — I haven't been tweeting long enough to judge its merits.
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@palafo