Check out Mini-Mediagazer for simple mobiles or Mediagazer Mobile for modern smartphones.
10:00 AM ET, September 12, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Wall Street Journal:
Amazon in Talks to Launch Digital-Book Library  —  Amazon.com Inc. is talking with book publishers about launching a Netflix Inc.-like service for digital books, in which customers would pay an annual fee to access a library of content, according to people familiar with the matter.
David Carr / New York Times:
News Trends Tilt Toward Niche Sites  —  It was a rough week for the big guys on the Web.  Yahoo unceremoniously dumped its chief executive, Carol Bartz, and AOL faced a mutiny from TechCrunch, the Silicon Valley news site it bought last year.  —  Apart from the specific business issues feeding …
Discussion: Felix
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
A Business Model Based on Conflict of Interest  —  On TechCrunch it's hard to tell where news ends and investing begins.  —  New technology provides an endless supply of information online, but as even Silicon Valley found out this month, it comes at a price: Readers have to work harder …
Discussion: Talking Biz News
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
The Blogosphere's Soft Corruption
Discussion: AllThingsD and Guardian
Stuart Elliott / Media Decoder:
Report Details Rise of Social Media  —  As social media like blogs, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube grow increasingly popular among consumers, marketers are seeking more data about the changing behavior of their customers.  —  The Nielsen Company, which has long provided such information …
Alessandra Stanley / New York Times:
On Slow and Somber Anniversary, News Media Try to Stay Out of the Picture  —  Television is about faces, not names.  It's about motion, not stillness.  So the fact that so much time on Sunday was dedicated to the slow, solemn recitation of all the Sept. 11 victims was as significant a tribute as the camera can make.
Discussion: WebProNews
RELATED:
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
How 9/11 helped to change the media landscape
Discussion: BBC, Media & Entertainment and Hot Air
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
BostonGlobe.Com Launches Today; Shifts To Paying Subscribers Only Oct. 1  —  One of the most unusual efforts to make money from a newspaper web site launches today in Boston, slightly less than a year after plans were announced.  For the rest of September, BostonGlobe.com, which went live overnight …
Barbara Chai / Wall Street Journal:
CBS Show Is Watching With Interactive Billboards  —  To promote its new fall drama “Person of Interest,” CBS Corp. is turning its eye on viewers.  —  To highlight the show's theme of citizen-surveillance, CBS is tapping into the trend of interactive billboards, installing one each in New York City and Los Angeles.
Financial Times:
Turning the page: newspapers face the future  —  The digitalisation of the media is no longer just about the migration towards online news.  —  Tablets, apps and mobile sites are all part of the package that must be provided by modern news organisations whose century-old business models …
New York Times:
Raid on Egyptian Al Jazeera Affiliate Seen as Part of a Broader Crackdown  —  CAIRO — Egyptian security forces raided the offices of an Egyptian affiliate of the Al Jazeera news network known for attentive coverage of street protests, eliciting allegations on Sunday of a crackdown on the news media …
Discussion: Free Press and Pajamas Media
Lauren A. E. Schuker / Wall Street Journal:
Glenn Beck Faces Big Test as New Show Bows  —  Conservative firebrand Glenn Beck faces his first big test since leaving Fox News when his new two-hour show begins Monday.  —  The first episode of Mr. Beck's program “Glenn Beck,” which will air on his new Internet-only network GBTV …
Discussion: The New York Observer
Press Gazette:
Ad demand prompts Grazia's biggest-ever edition  —  Women's weekly magazine Grazia will publish its biggest-ever issue during London Fashion Week following record levels of demand from advertisers, owners Bauer Media announced today.  —  The 300-page edition comes out on 20 September …
Discussion: Media Week
Ben Dowell / Guardian:
Private Eye is 50?  Surely shome mistake  —  It may feature old jokes and Andrew Neil in a vest every week, but its content is so well loved it makes £200,000 a year  —  Mention the phrases “surely shome mistake”, “that's enough, ed” and “Ugandan discussions” and you instantly …
Discussion: FleetStreetBlues
Dexter Filkins / New Yorker:
Syed Saleem Shahzad's murder, Pakistan, and the ISI.  —  On May 30th, as the sun beat down on the plains of eastern Pakistan, a laborer named Muhammad Shafiq walked along the top of a dam on the Upper Jhelum Canal to begin his morning routine of clearing grass and trash that had drifted into the intake grates overnight.
Discussion: Ask the Author and Felix Salmon
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
WaPo Co.'s Reality Check  —  While other newspaper companies struggled to stay afloat, the Washington Post Co. was sitting relatively pretty.  It had problems of its own, of course—let's not forget Newsweek—but it also had a white knight: its education unit, Kaplan.
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of Mediagazer at 10:00 AM ET, September 12, 2011.

View the current page or another snapshot:


 
 See Also: 
Mediagazer: site main
Mediagazer River: reverse chronological Mediagazer
Mediagazer Mobile: for phones
Mediagazer Leaderboard: Mediagazer's top sources
 
 Subscribe: 
Mediagazer RSS feed
Mediagazer on X
Mediagazer on Mastodon
 
 
 More News: 
Liz Shannon Miller / GigaOM:
Can Jane Espenson's Husbands jump from the web to TV?
Scott Eyman / Palm Beach Entertainment:
Former ‘Wall Street Journal’ publisher recalls the glory years of journalism in a new memoir