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11:20 PM ET, September 26, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Most — But Not All — Big Magazine Publishers Sign On for Amazon's Tablet  —  In 2010, magazine publishers got giddy about the prospects of selling their stuff on the iPad.  This year's version of the story: Lots of enthusiasm, tempered with a little bit of skepticism, over Amazon's new tablet.
RELATED:
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Ahead of Tablet Launch, Amazon Adds Fox Shows to Streaming Catalog
Howard Kurtz / The Daily Beast:
Roger's Reality Show  —  First, Ailes dialed back the Tea Party talk.  Now he's turning the GOP race into a political X-Factor—and steering the election agenda one more time.  —  It was part political spectacle, part American Idol, part YouTube extravaganza, a pure Roger Ailes production …
RELATED:
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Howard Kurtz: Fox News is ‘edging back toward the mainstream’
Julie Moos / Poynter:
More Americans now follow local, national news closely; teens, adults both rely most on TV for news  —  Buried in the latest Pew research on where Americans turn for local news, there's this important trend: 72 percent of respondents — nearly three-quarters — say they follow local news closely …
RELATED:
Brian Stelter / New York Times:   Pew Media Study Shows Reliance on Many Outlets
Michael Donohoe:
The Washington Post Social Reader app unnerves me.  The act of “Reading” is now itself an action.  You don't click any “read this” button.  It may be benign to some but there are potential pitfalls on the privacy front.  —  What if your friends saw a steady stream of articles that you were reading?
Discussion: @harrisj and The Awl
RELATED:
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:   With promise of audience growth, Facebook pulls news organizations within its walls
Jenna Wortham / Bits:
Tumblr Lands $85 Million in Funding  —  Over the past few years, Tumblr, a microblogging service, has steadily built a community of fans and users who like the site's combination of social networking features and simple blogging tools that lets them quickly post photographs, videos, songs, links and bits of text.
Vadim Lavrusik / Nieman Journalism Lab:
What Facebook's latest updates mean for journalists  —  Editor's Note: Vadim Lavrusik, Facebook's Journalist Program Manager, is responsible for building and managing programs that help journalists, in various ways, make use of Facebook in their work.  Below, he explains Facebook's recent design changes.
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
With its Standout tag, Google News is giving publishers a new incentive to credit the competition  —  This weekend, in a session at the Online News Association conference in Boston, Google News announced a new content tag for its US edition: the “standout” tag, meant to give publishers a new way to signal their best content to Google.
Erin Griffith / Adweek:
Social Draws Big Ad Dollars, but Does It Really Work?  —  Social media has outgrown its experimental play-money stage.  With marketers sinking up to $6 billion into social campaigns this year (according to eMarketer), the category has officially become a legitimate form of advertising.
Ben Fritz / Los Angeles Times:
Hollywood downloads a post-DVD future  —  The movie studio business model is poised for its biggest shift in years as Hollywood turns to Internet delivery as the only way to boost home entertainment revenues.  —  Rocket Video, a mecca for L.A. cinephiles, is closing after more than 30 years.
Discussion: 24 Frames, MediaPost and Medacity
Adrianne Jeffries / Betabeat:
Seamless, Fresh Out of Corporate Fetters, Buys MenuPages for $15 M. as GrubHub Comes Nipping  —  New York City-based online food ordering service Seamless, born SeamlessWeb during the dotcom boom in 1999, has purchased Menupages from New York magazine publisher New York Media for $15 million …
Ian Burrell / The Independent:
BBC chief: investigative journalism must not die  —  British journalism is going through a “dangerous period”, the Director-General of the BBC said yesterday, as he warned of the “disturbing trend” for police forces to demand journalistic sources and materials and cautioned against state regulation of the press.
Bill Carter / New York Times:
MSNBC Is Close to Falling to Third Place in Cable News Ratings  —  How badly has MSNBC been hurt by the loss of Keith Olbermann?  Enough, apparently, to be on the verge of falling back into third place among the cable news networks.  —  The ratings results for the month of September show that CNN …
Discussion: Inside Cable News
eMarketer:
Publishers Slow to Take Advantage of Mobile Sites  —  Device, OS fragmentation contribute to slow proliferation of mobile sites  —  More than two in five mobile users will go online from their phones each month, eMarketer estimates, but many websites have been slow to make their content available in mobile-optimized formats.
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Hearst and HGTV Enter a New Magazine in a Murky Market  —  With the economy sputtering, throw pillows and wicker baskets may not be at the top of many Americans' shopping lists.  Nor perhaps is a glossy magazine about where to buy them and how to make them pop against your freshly painted pale avocado walls.
 
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 More News: 
Chicago Tribune:
Fox apologizes on air for fake Cutler headlines
Devindra Hardawar / VentureBeat:
Slick news reader Pulse heads to Windows Phone, taking its time with ads
Mark Banham / Media Week:
DDS and Mediabank merge to create single agency system
Sarah Perez / TechCrunch:
Evri Comes To iPad With New Topic-Based News Reader
Nina Jones / WWD Media Headlines:
Condé Nast Sets More Restaurants
 Earlier Picks: 
Peter Hall / Morning Call:
The Morning Call rolls out digital subscriptions
Dan Sabbagh / Guardian:
Carl Bernstein on Rupert Murdoch's Watergate
Discussion: Media Myth Alert
Eric Wilson / New York Times:
Magazines Begin to Sell the Fashion They Review
Discussion: Gawker, MediaPost, Erik Wemple and Noted
David Carr / New York Times:
WikiLeaks' Founder, in a Gilded British Cage
Damien Cave / New York Times:
Mexico Turns to Social Media for Information and Survival