Top News:
Anthony Lane / New Yorker:
HACK WORK - A tabloid culture runs amok. — On March 21, 2002, a thirteen-year-old English schoolgirl took the train home. Usually, she took it all the way to Hersham, seventeen miles from London, where she lived, but on that day she got off one stop before, at Walton-on-Thames, to get something to eat.
Discussion:
Media Decoder, GalleyCat, The New York Observer and Media News, Advertising …
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David Carr / New York Times:
Scandal Splinters a Family Business
Scandal Splinters a Family Business
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, The First Post, The Awl, South Bend Tribune, New Yorker, New York Times and New York Times
Dean Starkman / CJR:
No, Actually, News of the World Won't Happen Here
Tim Castle / Reuters:
News Corp's James Murdoch under pressure over hacking testimony
News Corp's James Murdoch under pressure over hacking testimony
Discussion:
New York Times and Wall Street Journal
Seth Mnookin / New York Magazine:
The Kingdom and the Paywall — Some people thought that on Arthur Sulzberger Jr.'s watch, the New York Times could actually become extinct. They might need to issue a correction. — Two weeks ago, I went to the New York Times' gleaming, modernist, Renzo Piano-designed headquarters …
Discussion:
Poynter, The Corsair, Noted, On Media's Blog and @jayrosen_nyu
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John Koblin / WWD Media Headlines:
Bill Keller Pulls Plug on New York Times Magazine Column — Bill Keller is giving up his New York Times Magazine column, which will end in September, six months after it started. — Keller, who is becoming a full-time writer at the paper after he steps down as executive editor in September, will become an op-ed columnist.
Wall Street Journal:
Kobo, WSJ Halt Direct Sales on Apple-Device Apps — In a pair of moves that suggest Apple Inc. is enforcing rules for selling content on its devices, Kobo Inc., the Canadian e-book retailer, and The Wall Street Journal said Sunday they will no longer sell content directly to customers through their apps for Apple devices.
Discussion:
paidContent, GalleyCat, MacStories, Kobo, CNET News, AppleInsider, CNET News, CNNMoney.com, TechCrunch, Epicenter, Techland, Good E-Reader Blog, ZDNet, GeekWire, New York Times, The Digital Reader, Tim Anderson's ITWriting, Electronista, MacRumors, Mobile Entertainment, SlashGear, App Advice, The New York Observer, Digits, eBookNewser, Engadget, TUAW, Future of Journalism, The Loop and TeleRead, more at Techmeme »
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Flipboard Kicks Off Its First Advertising Program With Condé Nast — Users who follow The New Yorker magazine through iPad social reader Flipboard will start noticing advertising as part of the mix. The ads, beginning with a campaign by American Express, are part of a deal …
Discussion:
AdAge, MediaPost, AllThingsD, AllTwitter, Poynter, Adweek, Digits, mediabistro.com, The inneractive Blog, PR Newswire, eBookNewser, Media Week, Noted, Electronista, TeleRead, Future of Journalism and parislemon
Wall Street Journal:
‘What About the Journal?’ A Report from the Special Committee — Are 2,000 reporters self-censoring themselves when we ask if they are under ideological pressure? We don't think so. — As a condition of the acquisition of Dow Jones & Co., publisher of The Wall Street Journal …
Discussion:
Poynter, Guardian and On Media's Blog
Edmund Lee / AdAge:
AOL Sales Head Jeff Levick Out in Exec Shakeup — Ned Brody Names Chief Revenue Officer in Restructuring of Sales Team — AOL, one of the largest digital content and advertising companies, is undergoing a significant shake-up in its executive ranks. — Jeff Levick, who headed up global sales …
Discussion:
AllThingsD, Mixed Media, The Business Insider, TechCrunch, paidContent, The Business Insider and FishbowlNY
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Gawker Will Go to Court in Fox Investigation — Gawker, the popular blog based in New York, is going to court to investigate the relationship between the Fox News chairman, Roger Ailes, and Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey. — On Monday, the company and one of its reporters, John Cook …
Discussion:
Media & Entertainment, Mediaite, rbr.com, TVWeek.com, New York Magazine, The Wire, TVNewser, On Media's Blog and FishbowlNY
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Tom Callow / The Wall Blog:
How the BBC lost 60,000 Twitter followers to ITV — Back in March, I wrote this piece looking at the ownership issues around Twitter profiles used for professional purposes. I noted that sensible consensus seemed to be that a personal feed (with no inclusion of a company or brand name) …
Discussion:
Poynter and Lost Remote
The Awl:
Please Welcome.... The Awl is pleased to announce the hiring of John Shankman as publisher of The Awl, The Hairpin and Splitsider. — Shankman will begin next week. He is departing his position as account director at the Huffington Post. Prior, from 2007 to early 2010, he was a regional sales manager at Federated Media.
Craig Silverman / Regret the Error:
Massive failure of disclosure by writer brings Seattle Week cover story into question — Seattle Weekly published a remarkable cover story last week. Over the course of more than 6,000 words, it made the argument that true crime author Ann Rule made a series of mistakes and false conclusions in her book, Heart Full of Lies.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
Nat Ives / AdAge:
Meredith Guarantees Top Advertisers Sales Gains — Publisher Promises Free Space if Marketers Don't Meet Pre-arranged ROI Goal — Meredith, the publisher of large-circulation magazines such as Better Homes & Gardens and Ladies' Home Journal, is beginning to guarantee some of its biggest advertisers …
Discussion:
MediaPost, rbr.com, Folio and Media News, Advertising …
Adam Penenberg / Fast Company:
It's Time To Cut Back On “Hack” — In light of the News of The World scandal, let's re-examine how we use the term “hack.” — Over the years I've published tens of thousands of words on “hackers.” I wrote “Hacking Bhabha,” a story about the “hack” of an Indian atomic research station …
Discussion:
@megan
Vadim Lavrusik / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Five key building blocks to incorporate as we're rethinking the structure of stories — Editor's Note: Vadim Lavrusik is Facebook's first Journalist Program Manager, where he is responsible for, among other things, helping journalists to create new ways to tell stories. (You may remember him from his work at Mashable.)
J. Maureen Henderson / Forbes.com:
How To Make A Magazine In Two Days — Announce your theme at noon on a Friday using all of the powers of social media at your disposal. Give potential contributors 24 hours to create and submit their masterpieces. Spend the next 24 hours in a sleepless, coffee-powered editing haze.
Ken Doctor / Newsonomics:
For the Economist: Preserving the Best of Media Culture — The Economist is running a major series on the global news industry, well-worth checking into, excerpts available for non-subscribers. As part of that effort, I've been asked to contribute, among a half-dozen others (among them …