Top News:
Guardian:
Rebekah Brooks's resignation letter — How News International's chief executive informed staff she was stepping down — Rebekah Brooks resigns over phone-hacking scandal — At News International we pride ourselves on setting the news agenda for the right reasons. Today we are leading the news for the wrong ones.
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Amy Thomson / Bloomberg:
Rebekah Brooks Quits as News International Chief in Phone-Hacking Scandal — Rebekah Brooks, the chief executive officer of News Corp. (NWS)'s News International U.K. publishing unit, has stepped down amid a phone-hacking scandal that resulted in the closure of the News of the World tabloid she once edited.
Discussion:
Guardian, Guardian, CNN, CNBC, Business Wire, Financial Times, The Times, C21Media and @benfenton
Telegraph:
Phone hacking: Rebekah Brooks resignation statement — Rebekah Brooks has resigned as chief executive of News International following the phone hacking scandal. Here is the internal memo that was sent to NI staff: — Rebekah Brooks resigns in wake of NOTW phone-hacking scandal
Discussion:
Poynter, Washington Post, AllThingsD, Epicenter and ShortFormBlog
Bruce Orwall / Wall Street Journal:
In Interview, Murdoch Defends News Corp. — In his first significant public comments on the tabloid newspaper scandal that has engulfed his media empire, News Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch vigorously defended the company's handling of the crisis but said it would establish …
Discussion:
Telegraph, Poynter, Company Town, New York Magazine, Guardian, mediabistro.com, Future Journalism Project, Journalism.co.uk, Mixed Media, Broadcasting & Cable, BBC, AllThingsD, paidContent, Yahoo! News, Daily Mail, Associated Press, Sky News, Press Gazette, http://www.Stinkyjournalism …, RTÉ, TVNewser, On Media's Blog, The Daily Dish, Deadline.com, Runnin' Scared, Bloomberg, The Huffington Post, Gawker, The Lede, paidContent:UK, Adweek, Salon, The Wire, Future of Journalism and BLOGGING via TYPEWRITER
The Daily Beast:
Murdoch Scandal Roils WSJ — Faced with sleazy corporate cousins, reporters at the august Wall Street Journal are grappling with how to cover their boss's scandal—and their own survival. By Nick Summers. — On Tuesday, July 5, bureau chiefs and editors at The Wall Street Journal dialed …
Discussion:
Poynter, Erik Wemple, Company Town and The Nation
Tom McGeveran / Capital New York:
Down with Murdoch: Rebekah Brooks is gone, but now it's Parliament that's in trouble — Via World Economic Forum. — In an interview with The Wall Street Journal yesterday, Rupert Murdoch was hanging tough. — He said that in the massive phone-hacking scandal that has embroiled British Parliament …
Discussion:
New York Times, Guardian and The Wire
Jane Martinson / Guardian:
Tom Mockridge: profile of News International's new chief executive — Rebekah Brooks's replacement started as a print journalist down under before moving to run pay-TV channel Sky Italia — Tom Mockridge started his career as a national newspaper journalist working for the chief rival to Rupert Murdoch's interests in Australia.
Discussion:
Forbes.com, mediabistro.com and Broadcasting & Cable
Martin Wolf / Financial Times:
Seize the chance for media reform — Intimidated children rounding on the playground bully - that is the spectacle in the UK since the News of the World phone-hacking scandal exploded. As one who has long believed that the influence of Rupert Murdoch on UK public life was quite intolerable …
Sam Marsden / The Independent:
Murdoch to apologise in national newspapers — Rupert Murdoch will use adverts in national newspapers tomorrow to apologise for the News of the World's “serious wrongdoing”. — The media tycoon will personally say he is “deeply sorry” for the hurt suffered by the people affected as he seeks to atone for the phone hacking scandal.
Paul Farhi / Washington Post:
Phone-hacking scandal highlights the differences in British, U.S. media
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
For Murdoch Loyalist, Another Stint in the Spotlight
For Murdoch Loyalist, Another Stint in the Spotlight
Discussion:
Guardian
Tom Hays / Associated Press:
AP source: FBI reviews News Corp. 9/11 phone claim
AP source: FBI reviews News Corp. 9/11 phone claim
Discussion:
CJR, The House Committee …, Felix Salmon, The Wrap, Reuters, The Raw Story and PC Magazine
Hélène Mulholland / Guardian:
Phone hacking: Rupert Murdoch summonsed to appear before MPs
Phone hacking: Rupert Murdoch summonsed to appear before MPs
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk, Gothamist, Adweek, Kempton, Bloomberg, The Wire, Media Law Prof Blog, Adweek, New York Times, New York Times and Newsonomics
Natasha Mohanty / Google News Blog:
Shareable Google News badges for your favorite topics — (Cross-posted on the Official Google Blog) — On Google News, the average reader of political news has read 20 articles about politics in the last six months. Where do you stand? — Starting today, in the U.S. edition of Google News …
D.M. Levine / Adweek:
CNN Keeping Mum About Piers Morgan Hacking Allegations — CNN hasn't been shy about covering the phone hacking related woes of News Corp., parent of rival news network Fox News. It's devoted more than 100 segments to the scandal, according to liberal press watchdog Media Matters.
Discussion:
TVNewser, Media Matters for America, Inside Cable News, The Huffington Post, Guy Fawkes' blog and All Things CNN
Jonathan / awe.sm:
Twitter drives 4 times as much traffic as you think it does — Over the last few weeks, TechCrunch has run a couple posts using their own referrer logs to measure how sharing on various social services drives traffic. In these and other analyses based solely on referrer information …
Jxpaton / Digital First:
Our Next Big Step — Today we announced that the Journal Register Company has been bought by Alden Global Capital. And that's terrific news for us. — Alden has been an investor in our Company for some time and they have had a courtside seat to the Journal Register Company's radical makeover following our Digital First strategy.
Discussion:
CJR, Poynter, NetNewsCheck Latest and paidContent
RELATED:
BBC:
Guardian apologises to the Sun over Gordon Brown story — Gordon Brown questioned how the Sun came about information on his son's medical condition — The Guardian has apologised to the Sun for reporting that it accessed Gordon Brown's son's medical records.
Discussion:
paidContent, Poynter and blogs.telegraph.co.uk