Top News:
New York Observer:
Hot Damn! Behind the Young Rummy Aide Who Broke Bin Laden's Bust — Late Friday night, according to his now-infamous Twitter feed, Keith Urbahn toasted the end of the work week with a tall mint julep on a warm Washington evening, made from mint from his garden and 1792 small-batch Kentucky bourbon.
Discussion:
Mediaite
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New York Observer:
The Situation and the Story: Press Corps Parties While White House Makes History … It was Wednesday morning at 9:47 a.m. in the White House Press Briefing Room. The president of the United States of America, Barack Obama, took the podium. Major television networks had interrupted coverage to broadcast the president's address.
Jeremy Greenfield / FINS.com:
The Risk Taker in Hearst's David Carey — David Carey had led a charmed life in magazine publishing — until the 2007 launch of Conde Nast Portfolio. Two years and a reported $100 million later, the business publication went down in what Carey calls a “radioactive” environment for business publications.
Megan O'Neill / SocialTimes.com:
85% Of Media Websites Now Use Online Video To Cover News — Is web video becoming the main format for online news? According to a new survey by D S Simon it just may be. According to the survey, 85 percent of online media websites are now using online video content to cover the news, jumping a third from last year.
Discussion:
Editors Weblog
Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
Pelley to Anchor CBS News Amid Shifting Landscape — Longtime CBS reporter Scott Pelley will become anchor of the network's nightly newscast on June 6, the latest shift as broadcasters wrestle with how to extend the lifespan of the graying evening-news format.
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Martin Robbins / Guardian:
Libel law makes web hosts the Achilles heel of online journalism — Much attention has been focused on the chilling effects of Britain's libel laws on writers, but standing up to threats counts for little when websites can be shut down on a whim — In January 2008, web hosting firm Netcetera received …
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Social Media Policies: Let's Talk About What You Should Do — Social media tools like Twitter and Facebook have been around for several years now, but some media organizations are still just getting around to figuring out how to handle them — and in many cases, as we've written before …
Discussion:
The Buttry Diary, Techdirt and MediaShift, Thanks:mathewi
Archie Bland / CJR:
Anybody There? — Why the UK's phone-hacking scandal met media silence — When Rebekah Wade, then editor of the News of the World, felt that her newspaper had not been nominated for enough British Press Awards in 2002, she did not call her senior staff together to discuss how they might do better next year.
Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
Obama Drew Big TV Crowd — About 56.5 million people watched Barack Obama's surprise TV appearance Sunday night announcing the killing of Osama bin Laden. It was the president's biggest TV audience since he was elected, according to Nielsen Co. — Mr. Obama's speech was carried …
Discussion:
WatchingTV Online
Ben Sisario / New York Times:
Pandora Internet Radio Service to Offer Large Archive of Comedy Clips — Since it began six years ago, the Internet radio service Pandora has changed the way millions of people listen to music online. Now the company wants to do the same for comedy. — On Wednesday Pandora will add 10,000 clips …
Discussion:
Pandora, Richmond BizSense and NetworkEffect
Arem Duplessis / The 6th Floor:
The Making of a Cover — Our cover story on Sunday was about the American soldiers accused of murdering Afghan civilians. Some reports have depicted them as a rogue unit, but our story goes deeper into the psyche of the American soldier and questions whether the killings are symptoms of a much larger issue.
Claire Cain Miller / New York Times:
Google Takes to TV to Promote Browser — SAN FRANCISCO — Google is once again taking up arms in the browser wars, in the belief that people who use its Chrome Web browser will be more likely to keep using Google search. — The company is taking the battle to mainstream America …
Discussion:
MediaMemo, CNET News, The Next Web, Gawker and TechCrunch, more at Techmeme »
Ben Kunz / Thought Gadgets:
Why 1to1 personalization hasn't arrived (hint: media loses money) — The concept of 1to1 customer relationships, in which a marketer learns your needs and later gives you an offer tailored exactly to your whim, is tantalizing. Don Peppers espoused it back in the 1993 book “The One to One Future …
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Hearst Adopts AOL ‘Large Format’ Ads — As AOL (NYSE: AOL) prepares for its Q1 earnings on Wednesday morning—and the expectation that it will have reduced declines in display ad revenues in its first quarter with the Huffington Post under its wing—the company is laying some groundwork on its premium …
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, MediaMemo and FishbowlNY