Check out Mini-Mediagazer for simple mobiles or Mediagazer Mobile for modern smartphones.
3:45 PM ET, May 31, 2011

Mediagazer

 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.
RELATED:
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Jann Wenner Is Wrong Again, This Time About Tablets  —  Jann Wenner.  Image by Getty Images via @daylife  —  Jann Wenner, the founder and owner of Rolling Stone and Us Weekly, thinks it will be “a generation at least, maybe two generations” before readers switch en masse from printed magazines to tablet computers like the iPad.
Thanks:laureni
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
5 small steps journalists can take to build a bigger, more engaged audience  —  Traffic on news sites isn't just about page views and unique visits; it's about people.  To build an audience, you have to engage with your site's users and develop strategies to help you maintain your current audience …
Discussion: Future of Journalism
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 …
Parmy Olson / Disruptors:
Interview With PBS Hackers: We Did It For ‘Lulz And Justice’  —  The deface page posted on the PBS website by small hacking group LulzSec.  —  Ever wonder why black hat hackers and cyber vigilantes risk prison terms to do what they do?  The group of four people who hacked the PBS NewsHour website …
RELATED:
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 …
Dawn C. Chmielewski / Los Angeles Times:
YouTube counting on former Netflix exec to help it turn a profit  —  Robert Kyncl negotiated the deals that gave Netflix subscribers access to thousands of movies and television shows.  Now he's hoping to repeat that feat as head of TV and film for Google and YouTube.
Discussion: The Wire and Company Town
Brian Steinberg / AdAge:
News Corp.'s Hulu Hope: To Add More Commercials  —  Plan Is to Beef Up Inventory so Fox Can Sell Advertisers Richer Cross-platform Deals  —  Coming soon to Hulu: More ads?  —  As it negotiates its next contract with Hulu, News Corp. is pushing for the ability to run a greater number of ads …
Joe Pompeo / Yahoo! News:
Recently acquired Felix Dennis mag Mental Floss taps Playboy, Maxim vet James Kaminsky as editor  —  If a well-traveled captain is what it takes to steer a magazine out of relative obscurity, Mental Floss may soon find itself sailing into breezier seas.  —  The magazine—a bi-monthly compendium …
Discussion: FishbowlNY
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Metamarkets Raises $6 Million To Help Big Web Publishers Corral Big Data  —  Big web publishers sell lots and lots of ads, and that generates lots and lots of data.  It'd be pretty useful to keep track of all that information.  —  That's the basic premise behind Metamarkets, a 2-year old startup that just raised another $6 million.
Katie Feola / Adweek:
Heir to the Times' Throne?  —  If The New York Times' new paywall does somehow end up being the success the paper sorely needs, one man may benefit most of all: David Perpich, the Ochs-Sulzberger heir you've never heard of, the man who, if the paywall works, will look very much like his family's best hope.
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
NYT Discounts iPad Access By 80 Percent For Lincoln Subs  —  The New York Times Co. (NYSE: NYT) is pulling out the stops to build a base during the first year of its digital subscriptions.  The latest: supplementing a marketing deal with Lincoln for free access to NYTimes.com and smartphones …
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Hearst buys Lagardare's international titles for $919.4M  —  The ink will soon dry on the biggest magazine deal of the year — at least a month ahead of schedule, sources said.  —  Hearst's nearly $1 billion purchase of the international magazine empire of the Lagardere Group is going to close today, sources said.
Adweek:
First Mover: Edward Schumacher-Matos  —  Adweek: You have quite a last name.  —  Edward Schumacher-Matos: It's a mouthful, I know.  I was born in Colombia and I came to this country when I was young.  —  AW: Being an ombudsman puts you in the unique position of being paid to critique your employer.
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of Mediagazer at 3:45 PM ET, May 31, 2011.

View the current page or another snapshot:


 
 Who's Hiring in Media? 
 
 See Also: 
Mediagazer: site main
Mediagazer River: reverse chronological Mediagazer
Mediagazer Mobile: for phones
Mediagazer Leaderboard: Mediagazer's top sources
 
 Subscribe: 
Mediagazer RSS feed
Mediagazer on X
Mediagazer on Mastodon
 
 
 More News: 
Mike Madden / City Desk:
Dan Snyder Loves, and Subpoenas, the Press
Gene Hoffman / AdAge:
How Online Advertising Turned Media Into a Race to the Lowest Common Denominator
Hilde Torvanger / INMA:
Culture magazine provides powerful brand extension for newspaper
The Huffington Post:
AP Gets A New Politcs Chief
San Francisco Chronicle:
SF Chronicle introduces iPad app
Discussion: Editors Weblog
 Earlier Picks: 
Alfred Hermida / Huffington Post Canada:
The Fundamental Problem With Newspaper Paywalls
Michael Shmith / The Age:
Long way from hot metal: the changing face of newspapers
Elizabeth Jensen / New York Times:
PBS Plans Promotional Breaks Within Programs
Discussion: The Atlantic Wire and Adweek
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
The Value of Live Video Streaming at The Wall Street Journal is both the Audience and Process
Discussion: Future of Journalism