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12:25 PM ET, June 13, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
New York Times:
For Instant Ratings, Interviews With a Checkbook  —  Before the subjects of headlining news stories agree to a television interview these days, some have one question: how much money can I make?  —  ABC and NBC, embroiled in a fight for viewers in the mornings, are increasingly in the news …
RELATED:
Julie Moos / Poynter:
ABC's Chris Cuomo defends checkbook journalism: ‘It is the state of play right now’  —  During an interview with Howard Kurtz on CNN's “Reliable Sources” Sunday morning, “20/20″ co-anchor Chris Cuomo defended paying Meagan Broussard for photos she sent Anthony Weiner …
Discussion: Adweek and Chickaboomer
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
The orthodoxy of the article, part II  —  Frédéric Filoux willfully misrepresents me so that he may uphold the orthodoxy of the article.  He will be disappointed to learn that we agree more than he wishes.  Here is what I am really saying about the article.
Discussion: Guardian and eMedia Vitals
RELATED:
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
Jazz Is not a Byproduct of Rap Music
Discussion: Guardian
Matthew Lasar / Ars Technica:
Has the Internet “hamsterized” journalism?  —  Hey there newspaper reporter—has your broadband-powered job got you filing not only conventional stories, but blogging, video blogging, Facebooking, podcasting, picture posting, and Tweeting?  If so, you'll be happy to know that the Federal …
Discussion: TechCrunch
Tanzina Vega / Media Decoder:
Publisher Brings Digital Shopping to Its Magazines  —  The photos and quizzes in Hearst's online magazines are about to get a digital upgrade.  —  On Monday, Hearst Magazines Digital Media will announce two new features for its online publications that will make it easier for readers to buy the products they see on the page.
Matt Thompson / Poynter:
4 ways content management systems are evolving & why it matters to journalists  —  One byproduct of the digital media revolution is that most journalists today are techies, to a point.  It's increasingly rare to encounter reporters who don't covet the latest hyper-powered smartphone.
Adweek:
Bloomberg Strikes Again  —  Bloomberg Markets magazine has been flying under the radar—surprising, considering its readership consists of some of the country's richest CEOs and financiers.  But now it's introducing a new franchise and taking the fight right to bigger rival titles.
Discussion: Future of Journalism and The Wire
Lewis DVorkin / The Copy Box:
Forbes Update: Our New Newsroom for the Digital Era Is Now Up and Running  —  I love the newsroom.  Yes, I keep saying that.  I can remember the exact layout of my first, when I was a cub reporter 40 years ago at The Daily Iowan, the University of Iowa student newspaper.
Discussion: eMedia Vitals
Financial Times:
Reuters hires Harry Evans to widen its reach  —  Pressure from Bloomberg and print and online competitors has pushed the company to make several high-profile appointments in search for greater influence
Elizabeth Jensen / Media Decoder:
Nickelodeon as Provider of Homework  —  Nickelodeon has often underpinned its preschool television shows with curriculum-based teaching, but like a parent sneaking vegetables into the pasta, it tended to hide the educational values.  —  Not any more.  With the July 1 introduction of a line …
Discussion: TVWeek.com
Lauren A. E. Schuker / Wall Street Journal:
Current TV Bets Big on Olbermann  —  Keith Olbermann returns to television next Monday on cable network Current TV facing a formidable task: persuading viewers to tune into a virtually unknown channel to watch his new nightly show.  —  For Current TV, it's also an expensive gamble.
Discussion: Company Town
Amanda / slash blog:
Person as Distribution Channel: A Case Study of YouTube Star Dave Days  —  YouTube phenomenon Dave Days brings teenage girls to tears in the same way Justin Bieber does.  While he's not actually a mainstream celebrity, I think he's the best example of the new media movement toward …
Discussion: @mathewi
David Carr / New York Times:
Same Gaffes, but Now on Twitter  —  Richard Nixon did some terrible things in order to maintain a grip on the Oval Office, but the dumbest may have been recording what went on there.  —  Nowadays, the hidden recorder is no longer necessary: the Internet has become the Rose Mary Woods of the digital age …
 
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 More News: 
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
(Founder Stories) How Mike McCue Came Up With Flipboard: “What If We Accidentally Deleted The Web”
David Lieberman / Deadline.com:
EMMYS: Looking Far Into The Future of TV
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Casey Anthony Coverage Gives HLN an Identity
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Future of media: This is no time for incrementalism
Thanks:mathewi
 Earlier Picks: 
Robert McCrum / Guardian:
Thanks to the internet, we're all literary omnivores now
Ali Abunimah / The Electronic Intifada:
New evidence about Amina, the “Gay Girl in Damascus” hoax
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Egyptian Filmmaker Uses Twitter to Gather 300 GB of Revolution Video
Discussion: Future of Journalism