Top News:
Nielsen Wire:
Cross Platform Report: Americans Watching More TV, Mobile and Web Video — The average American today has more ways to watch video — whenever, however and wherever they choose. In the Cross-Platform Report, Nielsen finds that the resounding trend is this: Americans are spending …
Discussion:
Mashable!, GigaOM, Future of Journalism, WebProNews and Lost Remote, more at Techmeme »
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Audrey Watters / ReadWriteWeb:
Does More Internet Streaming and Web Video Mean Less Traditional TV Viewership? — Despite all the hullabaloo about the ascendancy of Web video and predictions about the demise of cable, Americans still watch a lot of television. Those are the findings, at least, from the latest study by Nielsen.
Wall Street Journal:
Regional Newspapers' Merger Talks Break Down — Buyout discussions between the publishers of the Denver Post and Orange County Register broke down recently amid disagreements over price, said people familiar with the matter, as regional newspapers grapple with consolidation efforts to shore up their finances.
Discussion:
Gazette, The Latest Word and Poynter
Glynnis MacNicol / The Wire:
Here's Why There Are (Almost) No Women In The Big NYT ‘Page One’ Documentary — It's not entirely true to say there are no women in Page One: Inside the New York Times, the new documentary that spends a year following the NYT media desk as they cover an imploding industry in which their paper plays a major role.
Discussion:
Poynter, Future of Journalism and Yahoo! News
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Kara Swisher / AllThingsD:
Ready for His Digital Close-Up: The NYT's Media Dude, David Carr, Talks About “Page One”
Ready for His Digital Close-Up: The NYT's Media Dude, David Carr, Talks About “Page One”
Discussion:
mediabistro.com and Anthony DeRosa
Jamie Miles / New York Magazine:
Timesmen React to Their Portrayal in Page One Documentary
Timesmen React to Their Portrayal in Page One Documentary
Discussion:
EW.com, FishbowlNY, Chickaboomer and New York Post
Noah Davis / SAI: Silicon Alley Insider:
EXCLUSIVE: Sports Illustrated Proves Why Tablets Are Better Than Print — Sports Illustrated will publish twice this week. — For the first time ever, the magazine will update its tablet editions with new content on Thursday. — The NHL playoffs going to a seventh game gave editors the opportunity.
Discussion:
Future of Journalism
Andrei Scheinkman / Open:
Using Twitter as Your Database — For the 2010 election, we built a continuously updated election guide that let readers explore data related to each of the 509 congressional and gubernatorial races. — After adding candidate information, race ratings, polls, election forecasts …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals and Future of Journalism
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Comparing The Major Magazine Publishers' App Portfolios — Magazine publishers are putting a lot of faith in apps, building development teams and spending hundreds of thousands of dollars (in some cases, much more) to launch them. Last week, Hearst unveiled its new app lab.
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals and Canadian Magazines
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Gawker Gets Into the TV Business — The Japanese Cult Hit Game Show TV Business — Gawker Media boss Nick Denton says he wants his blog empire to be more than a blog empire - he wants it to be like TV. So here's the next logical step: He's going to start running a TV show on one of his blogs.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY, eMedia Vitals and The Wire
Jack Shafer / Slate:
U.K. tabloids: Threat or menace? — Brian Cathcart performs a radical bit of professional taxonomy in his 3,900-word essay in the new issue of Index on Censorship that amounts to an expulsion order for the more unscrupulous elements in the British tabloid press.
Aaron Mackey / Reporters Committee News:
Federal law bars libel suit against New York bloggers — A federal law protects website publishers who add material to defamatory posts and attempt to elicit greater discussion on the topic, New York's highest court ruled earlier this week. — In a 4-3 decision on Tuesday …
Nellie Andreeva / Deadline.com:
The Onion Signs First-Look Deal With CBS TV Studios — After launching two Onion-branded cable series this year, the satiric news organization is setting its sights on broadcast next. The Onion, best known for its fake-news newspaper and Web site, has signed a one-year first-look development deal with CBS Television Studios.
Ben Kuchera / Ars Technica:
Duke Nukem's PR threatens to punish sites that run negative reviews — A large part of my job is dealing with people who work in public relations. The vast majority of those whose do PR for video game companies are polite, well-intentioned, and extremely professional.
Discussion:
GameLife, Techdirt, Guardian, ZDNet, The Escapist, broadstuff, The Awl, The Consumerist, Most Recent Home Page Posts …, The Loop, Boing Boing and BGR
Lisa Lockwood / WWD Media Headlines:
Memo Pad: The Hilfigers Settle In... GQ Goes E-tail... HOMEBODIES: After stints at the country club, a Thanksgiving picnic and a tailgate party, the Hilfigers, a fictional all-American family made up of eclectic characters, are settling in at home. Tommy Hilfiger's fall-winter ad campaign features …
Nikki Usher / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Less of less: FCC-commissioned report finds a “surprisingly small audience for local news traffic” — Local news outlets get less than one half of one percent of all pageviews in a typical market, according to a new report (pdf) called “Less of the Same: The Lack of Local News on the Internet.”
Discussion:
SocialTimes.com
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