Top News:
Nat Ives / AdAge:
Jann Wenner: Magazines' Rush to iPad Is ‘Sheer Insanity and Insecurity and Fear’ — Successful Migration to Tablet Editions Will Take ‘Decades,’ Rolling Stone Co-Founder Says in Interview — Nobody mistakes Jann Wenner — whose Wenner Media publishes Rolling Stone, Us Weekly and Men's Journal — for a digital fanboy.
Mathew Ingram / gigaom.com:
No, Twitter Is Not a Replacement For Journalism — Updated: In the wake of a number of events, including the use of Twitter as a real-time reporting tool by New York Times writer Brian Stelter during the aftermath of the recent tornado in Missouri, media theorist and journalism professor Jeff Jarvis …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals, newsplexer, Common Sense Journalism, Editors Weblog, Future of Journalism and Poynter
David Streitfeld / New York Times:
Funny or Die: Groupon's Fate Hinges on Words — RACHEL HANDLER is struggling to say something funny or perhaps amusing or at least clever about horses. Her mind is empty. She can't recall the last time she was on a horse or even saw a horse. The minutes fly by. Horses are nothing to joke about.
Discussion:
Rex Hammock's RexBlog.com, Deadspin and Steve Rubel
Jeremy W. Peters / Media Decoder:
Harvard Business Review Reinvention Is Paying Off — Shortly after editors at the Harvard Business Review tore up their magazine in 2009, adding pictures to the cover, reader comments to their signature case studies and colorful illustrations — the horror! — cranky reader comments started coming in.
Kevin Poulsen / Threat Level:
Hacktivists Scorch PBS in Retaliation for WikiLeaks Documentary — Hackers posted a fake news story to the website of PBS's Newshour on Sunday. — A hacker group unhappy with PBS Frontline's hour-long documentary on WikiLeaks has hit back at the Public Broadcasting System by cracking its servers …
Discussion:
Boing Boing, Disruptors, Mediaite, Poynter, New York Times, Online NewsHour, SC Magazine Australia, CNET News, The Huffington Post, ZDNet, PC Magazine and The Daily What
David Carr / New York Times:
An Outsider Making Waves in Hollywood — LOS ANGELES — On an unusually clear day in West Hollywood last week, Janice Min took a seat at the Soho House, the full expanse of the Hollywood Hills serving as a backdrop for lunch. It was odd to see Ms. Min, a fixture of Manhattan magazine publishing …
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Here's How You Might Be Able to Watch Live TV, For Free, on Your iPad — Your iPad can do lots of things, but live TV generally isn't one of them. With a few exceptions, the TV networks don't want their programming going out live anywhere but your big screen, under their supervision.
Discussion:
Future of Journalism
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
The Value Live Video Streaming at The Wall Street Journal is both the Audience and Process — In addition to connecting with a valued audience with live programming, the process of creating daily Webcasts is valuable to the news organization, explains Kevin Delaney, Managing Editor of the WSJ.com
Russell Adams / Wall Street Journal:
New Business Model in Vogue at Condé Nast — Condé Nast—the glitzy magazine empire that was brought to its knees by the advertising recession—is grappling with the fundamental challenge also facing many of its peers: how to preserve its print business while it also tries …
Elizabeth Jensen / New York Times:
PBS Plans Promotional Breaks Within Programs — FOR decades, the uninterrupted programming on PBS has been one of its most distinctive selling points to audiences and philanthropic and corporate supporters alike. — But those leisurely stretches of break-free programs could be going away.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner / Los Angeles Times:
Can Jane Pratt's xoJane.com preach to the snarky? — Sassy magazine's former editor, who spawned a generation of witty and cynical female bloggers, hopes her site appeals to 18- to 49-year-olds. — Emily McCombs, managing editor, left, Jane Pratt, creator, and Cat Marnell of Sassy and Jane magazines …
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
Trifling Twitter — When a member of the old guard barges into their cozy backyard, the Digerati jump up and strike indignant poses. And when the intruder's point is missed, its author gets crucified. This is what happened to Bill Keller, the New York Times' executive editor, when he dared to write a column critical of Twitter.