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7:40 PM ET, March 21, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Times's Online Pay Model Was Years in the Making  —  The discussions played out over most of 2009 amid the hum of the third floor newsroom and in the executive suites high above Times Square, consuming what seemed like countless meetings and consultants' recommendations.
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David Carr / Media Decoder:
Paying for The Times at SXSW  —  On Thursday, I had lunch with a pal at the South by Southwest Interactive Conference, that annual crush of media and technology people that descends on the lovely town of Austin.  When he offered to pay, I said, “You don't need to do that.”  —  “That's all right,” he said.
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
That was quick: Four lines of code is all it takes for The New York Times' paywall to come tumbling down  —  The New York Times paywall is costing the newspaper $40-$50 million to design and construct, Bloomberg has reported.  —  And it can be defeated through four lines of Javascript.
Jean-Louis Gassée / Monday Note:
The NY Times: Un-Free At Last!
Discussion: Daring Fireball
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
The Biggest Flaw in NYT Pay Plan: It's Backward-Looking
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:   NYTimes' “Fair” Prices
Subtraction.com:
What the NYT Pay Wall Really Costs
Discussion: @tummler10
New York Times:
Libya Releases 4 Times Journalists  —  TRIPOLI, Libya — The Libyan government released four detained New York Times journalists Monday, six days after they were captured while covering the conflict between government and rebel forces in the eastern city of Ajdabiya.  They were released into the custody of Turkish diplomats.
RELATED:
Ben Dowell / Guardian:
World Service to sign funding deal with US  —  Low six-figure investment will aim to help combat censorship of TV and internet services in countries including Iran and China  —  The BBC World Service is to receive a “significant” sum of money from the US government to help combat the blocking …
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
If You Love Something, Set It Sort-Of Free: Condé Nast Mulling Reddit Spin-Off  —  Condé Nast, which bought Reddit five years ago, is considering spinning out the social news site.  —  The publisher would continue to own the site, but it's talking to investors about selling a stake.
Discussion: The Next Web
Brooks Barnes / Media Decoder:
A Glossy Take on Disney  —  LOS ANGELES — Ask executives at Disney Publishing to explain why they are trying to build a children's subscription magazine business in the United States, and the answer will involve marketplace analysis this and business model that.
New York Observer:
Foster Kamer Named Senior Editor of ‘The New York Observer’  —  Foster Kamer, currently the online news and features editor for Esquire, will join the staff of The New York Observer as a senior editor and Wall Street reporter.  —  Prior to Esquire, Mr. Kamer reported on media, culture …
Howard Kurtz / The Daily Beast:
What's Killing NPR  —  It's not the conservative attacks.  It's the network's complete lack of a strategy to save itself.  In this week's Newsweek, Howard Kurtz describes how NPR reporters are pointing fingers at their own management.  —  Steve Inskeep, A veteran National Public Radio correspondent …
David Carr / New York Times:
The Evolving Mission of Google  —  Today's quiz: What company derives 96 percent of its revenue from advertising, has a video platform that is currently negotiating with the National Basketball Association, a movie studio and various celebrities, and is developing a subscription service …
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Slip and slide: Newspaper industry increases production of scary charts  —  You may have come across the chart-making work of blogger Michael DeGusta last month, when he recrunched some numbers on the music business that illustrated that industry's financial decline.
Nikki Usher / Nieman Journalism Lab:
“News media are targeted but audiences are not”: Herbert Gans on multiperspectival journalism  —  Herbert Gans, a professor emeritus in Sociology at Columbia University, wrote perhaps the seminal book about news organizations.  In Deciding What's News: A Study of CBS Evening News …
Michael Learmonth / AdAge:
Time Warner, Other Cable Cos.  Stake Out Turf in Digital Frontier  —  IPad App Sets Off Tussle Over Content and Distribution  —  There's an epic tussle going on over the future of TV, and fusty old cable served notice last week — it won't be left behind.
Discussion: Company Town
Ethan Klapper / mediabistro.com:
Meet ‘Producer Matthew’ Keys: Aggregation Journalist  —  Uprising in Egypt.  Earthquake and tsunami in Japan.  Missile strikes in Libya.  —  Major news has broken in every corner of the world during the past few weeks.  In that time, Matthew Keys has proven himself to be a must follow for the latest from these hot spots.
Ben LaMothe / 10,000 Words:
Why Newspapers Need Community Managers  —  The term “community manager” has been around for a while.  However with the growth of social media in business, it's turned into more of a buzz term.  Do a search online for “Community Manager Job” and you'll get hundreds, if not thousands, of results.
Discussion: eBookNewser
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Rush of Events Gives Foreign News a Top Priority  —  Propelled by revolution in the Middle East and radiation in Japan, television news coverage of foreign events this year is at the highest level since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks 10 years ago, news executives in the United States say.
 
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 More News: 
Greg Hernandez / LA:
Hollywood Reporter: Costs to Cover
Discussion: Poynter
Julie Bosman / Media Decoder:
Noted Self-Publisher May Be Close to a Book Deal
David Kaplan / paidContent:
BIA/Kelsey: Local Online Ad Revenues Will Double By 2015
Tommy Christopher / Mediaite:
Mediaite In The Control Room: Q&A With Bill Wolff, Exec. Producer Of The Rachel Maddow Show
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Facebook's Rise Is a Big Deal for Media Sites. For the Rest of the Web, Not So Much.
Tom Hayes / The Huffington Post:
Ok, Call Me a Digital Scab
Discussion: Editors Weblog and FishbowlNY
 Earlier Picks: 
Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
Web Shows Get Ambitious
Joseph Tartakoff / paidContent:
Hearst Adds Daily Deals Powered By Analog Analytics
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
Rebecca Black Means The (Internet) Fame Game Has Changed
Discussion: Techland
The Independent:
Stephen Glover: A good newspaper but not a good business
Discussion: Press Gazette and Guardian
Josh Marshall / Talking Points Memo:
Taking Stock  —  A TPM Reader and student of Japan takes …