Top News:
Marissa Mayer / The Official Google Blog:
Google just got ZAGAT Rated! — “Did you know there's a place in Menlo Park near the Safeway that has a 27 food rating?” one of my friends asked me that about two years ago, and I was struck because I immediately knew what it meant. Food rating... 30 point scale... Zagat. And the place... had to be good.
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, DealBook, @marissamayer, Jeff Jarvis, rbr.com, Reuters, Future of Journalism, Forbes, Zagat Buzz, TechCrunch, Business Insider, Media & Entertainment, Betabeat, AdAge, Gawker, VentureBeat, Eater National, Epicenter, paidContent:UK, The New York Observer, Adweek, Beet.TV, The Wrap, Computerworld, ClickZ, Fortune, CNNMoney.com, Globe and Mail, msnbc.com, PE Hub Blog, Fast Company, John Battelle's Searchblog, @jeremyhfisher, GeekWire, @jeffjarvis, ReadWriteWeb, VatorNews, Screenwerk, MarketingVox News & Trends, New York Magazine, The Consumerist, Techi.com, CNET News, GalleyCat, Gannett Blog, AllThingsD, Felix Salmon, LAUNCH, PC Magazine, The Next Web, Techland, Mashable!, GigaOM, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Hillicon Valley and eBookNewser, more at Techmeme »
RELATED:
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines Blog:
Google acquires Zagat, enters original content business — Summary: Google said that Zagat will “be a cornerstone of our local offering.” Zagat is best known for its original reviews and rating service. — Google on Thursday acquired Zagat in an effort to bolster its local products with the restaurant rating service.
Discussion:
broadstuff, MediaFile, Computerworld and WebProNews, more at Techmeme »
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Paton: Too Early To Say Whether MediaNews Paywalls Stay Up — Journal Register CEO John Paton has been a vocal opponent of using paywalls to increase digital revenue for newspapers, as have his advisory board members Jeff Jarvis, Emily Bell and Jay Rosen. But what happens now that he is also the CEO …
Discussion:
Poynter, mediabistro.com, Guardian, San Francisco Peninsula … and eMedia Vitals
RELATED:
Felix Salmon:
When digital ads pay for local news
When digital ads pay for local news
Discussion:
BrauBlog, Street Fight, GigaOM, News for Digital Journalists, Digital First and NetNewsCheck Latest
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of ComboCo — Editor's Note: Each week …
The newsonomics of ComboCo — Editor's Note: Each week …
Discussion:
Future of Journalism and paidContent
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
Washington Post publisher Weymouth sees new media as ‘them,’ not ‘us’ — Washington Post Publisher Katharine Weymouth draws a big, bold line between “old media” like the Post and “new media” such as blogs and citizen journalists. — The Post is embracing the new “tools” of online journalism …
Discussion:
Zombie Journalism, B2B Memes and J-Lab
Jon Lafayette / Broadcasting & Cable:
ESPN Signs News Rights Deal With NFL — Keeps ‘Monday Night Football’ through 2021 — Jumping the gun on the kickoff of the pro football season Thursday night, Walt Disney Co.'s ESPN unit has signed an extension with the NFL that will keep Monday Night Football on the cable channel for eight more years.
Discussion:
Multichannel, Adweek, Forbes, MediaPost, The Wrap and mediabistro.com
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
Content Deluge Swamps Yahoo — Yahoo, Rivals Fetch Less for Ads as Services That Sift Through Web Gain an Edge — Ousted Yahoo Inc. Chief Executive Carol Bartz faced a plight all too familiar to many of her peers: Making money off digital content isn't easy and it's getting harder.
Discussion:
Fortune, On Media's Blog, GigaOM, George Dearing dot com and Editors Weblog, more at Techmeme »
BBC:
Nato-led forces killed BBC reporter in Afghanistan — Ahmed Omed Khpulwak sent text messages saying: “Death has come” — The Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) in Afghanistan has admitted it mistakenly killed BBC reporter Ahmed Omed Khpulwak in July.
Discussion:
Guardian, TVNewser, Mediaite, The Huffington Post, Jon Slattery, Business Insider and msnbc.com
Choire Sicha / The Awl:
Inside Gawker Media's First Company-Wide Meeting — Last night, Gawker Media held its first real company-wide meeting at the Crosby Hotel screening room, down in the hotel's swank basement. Honcho Nick Denton gave a speech from the stage—just like a real grown-up company, and also totally not.
Discussion:
Poynter and @weareyourfek
Dan Primack / Fortune:
Arrington out at AOL (for real this time) — Not TechCrunch editor. Not AOL Ventures employee. Michael Arrington is on his own. — It has been a very long week for AOL. And it's about to get even longer. — Last Thursday, word leaked that one of its employees …
Discussion:
The Atlantic Wire, A VC, eMedia Vitals, Poynter, TechCrunch, PE Hub Blog, Time, paidContent, Adweek, Forbes, Editors Weblog, Betabeat, The Awl, VentureBeat, broadstuff, Geek News Central, Medacity, FT Tech Hub, WebProNews, New York Magazine, Business Insider, Future of Journalism, Gawker, CNET News, ShortFormBlog, Mixed Media and American Journalism Review, more at Techmeme »
Anthony DeRosa:
David Karp discusses Tumblr's growing pains — The very platform this post is appearing on is undergoing a bit of a revolution. The rise of blogs over the past decade has begun to give way to microblogging platforms, such as Twitter and Tumblr. The difference between the two is that microblogs tend …
Discussion:
Betabeat and ShortFormBlog
AdAge:
Glamour Publisher Job Goes to Jason Wagenheim, Publisher of Entertainment Weekly — Conde Nast's decision to name Jason Wagenheim the new publisher at Glamour sparks yet another turnover in the publisher's job at Entertainment Weekly. Mr. Wagenheim had only been running EW since December.
Discussion:
MediaPost, MinOnline, FishbowlNY and The New York Observer
Henry Blodget / Business Insider:
Our Policy On Anonymous Sources — Last week, NYU journalism professor Jay Rosen asked about our policy on anonymous sources. — Here is that policy: — We will grant anonymity to any source at any time for any reason. — The logic for this policy is simple.
Discussion:
Poynter
Alex Goldman / On the Media:
A BRIEF HISTORY OF RIGHTHAVEN — Over the past year, we have reported a couple of times on a company called Righthaven, which buys certain copyrights on newspaper content and sues bloggers and aggregators who repost said content, either in part or in full. This week, several news outlets …
Discussion:
Threat Level
RELATED:
Jeff Roberts / paidContent:
Righthaven Terminates Lawyer, Stops Filing New Cases
Righthaven Terminates Lawyer, Stops Filing New Cases
Discussion:
Threat Level, Poynter, Plagiarism Today and WebProNews
Dean Starkman / CJR:
A Heavy Blow to The Wall Street Journal — Anyone who thinks the departure of Alix M. Freedman, the WSJ's Page One editor, a twenty-seven-year Journal mainstay, and winner of one of the more storied Pulitzers in my old paper's storied past, is inside-baseball for media types is dead wrong.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
Rick Edmonds / Poynter:
Media companies have three ways to innovate, each with its own barriers — Deteriorating advertising revenues in 2011 have brought skeptics in news organizations around to what their critics have been saying for years: Innovation is an imperative. — But how, exactly?
Discussion:
MediaPost
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
No, licensing journalists isn't the answer — Is the media industry in turmoil? Clearly it is, with publishers fighting declines in circulation and advertising revenue, combined with competition from digital-native entities such as blog networks and the “democracy of distribution” …
Thanks:mathewi