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9:40 AM ET, April 25, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
BACKSTORY: How News Outlets Raced To Publish WikiLeaks Gitmo Docs  —  NEW YORK — On Sunday night, more than a half dozen major news organizations in the United States and Europe began publishing shocking new revelations from a long-rumored WikiLeaks trove of documents about prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.
RELATED:
New York Times:
A Note to Readers: The Background
Adweek:
The Hot List  —  The magazine industry emerged this year from the most perilous downturn in its history with a set of unmistakable powerhouse titles celebrated here in Adweek's 31st annual Hot List.  Those that made the cut, from Food Network Magazine at No. 1 to Vanity Fair at No. 10 …
Discussion: Talking Biz News, Adweek and Adweek
Claire Cain Miller / New York Times:
Filtering the Social Web to Present News Items  —  SAN FRANCISCO — News events as varied as the commercial jet landing in the Hudson River and the uprisings in Egypt have demonstrated that people armed with cellphones — not professional reporters — are often the first source of breaking news …
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
At Last, Couric Is Expected to Say She's Leaving CBS  —  This week, Ms. Couric is planning to acknowledge one of the worst-kept secrets in television: that she is leaving the “CBS Evening News” after five years.  Then, as soon as she returns from London, where she will be anchoring …
Discussion: The Huffington Post
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
Zeller quits NYT to become HuffPo energy/environment reporter  —  Romenesko Misc.  —  Tom Zeller says “it's been a source of great pride for me to walk through the doors of The New York Times every day ... but I also think it's critically important that we continue developing and nurturing …
Julie Bosman / New York Times:
Tales of Reading in Reintroducing a Color Device  —  “TILL rhymes stop rhyming, and pots stop boiling,” a voice-over says, “by hook or by crook, by book or by nook.”  —  Make that Nook Color, the e-reading tablet that Barnes & Noble is hoping to reintroduce to consumers in an advertising campaign that begins on Monday.
Wall Street Journal:
Demand Builds for TV Ad Time  —  Forecasters See Solid ‘Upfront’ Market for Commercial Sales, Although NFL Dispute Hangs Over Talks  —  As rising gasoline prices and stubbornly high unemployment hold back the U.S. economy, one marketplace still appears to be as hot as ever: TV advertising.
John Swansburg / New York Magazine:
The Comic Stylings of Brian Williams  —  How's an anchor to cope when network newscasts keep losing ground?  Having a second career helps.  —  Over dinner at The Four Seasons, Brian Williams takes off his regimental tie and discusses his burgeoning side career in comedy.
Zeke Turner / WWD Media Headlines:
Bloomberg Businessweek's Design Darling  —  A dark horse to be sure, Bloomberg Businessweek has become a favorite of the design community.  While the magazine's covers have been setting a high bar for other weeklies, the magazine's creative director, Richard Turley, an import from The Guardian in England, is basically unknown.
David Carr / New York Times:
War, in Life and Death  —  Tim Hetherington was a war photographer in every regard.  Tall, brutally handsome and modest, he had a British accent plucked from a Graham Greene novel and the body fat of a Diet Coke.  —  When I met him last summer, he had finished co-directing “Restrepo,” …
Discussion: Spiersblr
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
YouTube Mulls Monetization Scheme for New, Live Streaming Service  —  SAN BRUNO, CA — The the introduction of the live streaming platform of YouTube is nothing less than “creating a new YouTube,” says YouTube's Joshua Siegel, Product Manager for Live Streaming, in this interview with Beet.TV conducted at the company's headquarters.
Discussion: hypebot
Max Read / Gawker:
The Onion Fools The New York Times  —  You may have been surprised to see President Obama's smiling face on the cover of Tiger Beat in last week's The New York Times article about the “original teen-girl tabloid.”  Your surprise was not unwarranted, as the Times admitted today: More »
New York Magazine:
An Appreciation: Thirty-one Down  —  After three decades-plus of puzzle-making, Maura B. Jacobson is retiring.  —  Truth is, New York Magazine hired Maura Jacobson by accident.  It was 1980, and New York, looking to expand its culture coverage, had bought and absorbed a listings magazine called Cue.
Robert Andrews / paidContent:UK:
A Tale Of Two Timeses: A New York Meter, A London Wall  —  They may share both a name and new online fees, but onlookers shouldn't confuse the new access models of The New York Times and Britain's The Times.  Though each is historically the “paper of record” in their respective countries …
 
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 More News: 
Eric Pfanner / New York Times:
In Slovakia, News Outlets Take Cue From Cable
Anthony Shadid / New York Times:
Exiles Shaping World's Image of Syria Revolt
Discussion: Reuters and Big News Network.com
TechCrunch:
Q&A With Survivor Host Jeff Probst On Surviving Social Media
Discussion: Future of Journalism
 Earlier Picks: 
Alex Pham / Los Angeles Times:
Game journalism goes new school with iPad app
Discussion: Future of Journalism
Cory Bergman / Lost Remote:
KMOV puts Facebook to work covering airport tornado
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest