Top News:
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Netflix Abandons Plan to Rent DVDs on Qwikster — Abandoning a break-up plan it announced last month, Netflix said Monday morning that it had decided to keep its DVD-by-mail and online streaming services together under one name and one Web site. — The company admitted that it had moved …
Brooks Barnes / Media Decoder:
TV and Film, From Condé Nast — LOS ANGELES — Condé Nast is coming to Hollywood. — The magazine publisher's biggest titles, especially Vogue and Vanity Fair, have long been hardwired into the movie capital. But Condé Nast as a company has been notably absent …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY, paidContent, Noted, Broadcasting & Cable and The New York Observer
Benjamin Wallace / New York Magazine:
Piers Morgan Isn't Sleeping Well — CNN's new Larry King made his name in the scandal-chasing, privacy-invading British tabloid gutter. He's now ascended to cable-news royalty, though his past is casting a shadow over the coronation. — Piers Morgan used to have anxiety dreams about Rupert Murdoch.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Fox News and Hannity at the Top After 15 Years — ATLANTA — When the Fox News host Sean Hannity arrived at Centennial Olympic Park here on Thursday night, some of the hundreds of fans who had been waiting for him since sunset rushed to the rope line for handshakes and autographs.
Discussion:
The New York Observer
Drew Grant / The New York Observer:
Jesse LaGreca Continues to Destroy Media Bias of Occupy Wall Street on ABC's This Week [Video] — George Will vs. Jesse LaGreca on ABC's “This Week” — Occupy Wall Street's articulate champion of the Nu-New Left, Jesse LaGreca, finally made it to air this Sunday when he was invited on ABC's This Week with Christiane Amanpour.
RELATED:
David Carr / New York Times:
A Protest's Ink-Stained Fingers
A Protest's Ink-Stained Fingers
Discussion:
Credit.com News + Advice and Chickaboomer
Julie Moos / Poynter:
Layoffs follow pay cut at Poynter's St. Petersburg Times — When he announced a recent 5 percent pay cut for staff and change in severance payments, St. Petersburg Times chairman and CEO Paul Tash said the cost-cutting “will likely include further job reductions,” and now it has.
Julia Angwin / Wall Street Journal:
Secret Orders Target Email — The U.S. government has obtained a controversial type of secret court order to force Google Inc. and small Internet provider Sonic.net Inc. to turn over information from the email accounts of WikiLeaks volunteer Jacob Appelbaum, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
Discussion:
Digits, Free Press, Fast Company, Mashable!, msnbc.com, CNN, @csoghoian, @wikileaks, CNET News, Agence France Presse and Boing Boing, more at Techmeme »
Ali Gharib / ThinkProgress:
Conservative Writer Admits ‘Infiltrating’ 99 Percent Movement To ‘Mock And Undermine’ It — Museum guards warn off demonstrators from entrance (AP) — An assistant editor with a right-wing magazine admitted in a column Saturday evening to posing as part of the 99 Percent Movement in D.C. “in order to mock and undermine” it.
Discussion:
Washington Post, cgrapski's FDL blog, Gawker, Associated Press, Brooklyn Mutt, The Raw Story and Boing Boing
RELATED:
Josh Feldman / Mediaite:
Reliable Sources Panel Analyzes The Difference Between Tea Party And Occupy Wall Street Media Coverage
Reliable Sources Panel Analyzes The Difference Between Tea Party And Occupy Wall Street Media Coverage
Discussion:
Forbes, Media News, Gawker, AdAge and The New York Observer
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
Bloomberg Bows Luxe Mag — Through its terminal business, Bloomberg LP has served as a tool for financiers to make money. Now, it'll tell them how to spend it. — Bloomberg Markets, the monthly magazine sent free to terminal subscribers, will test Bloomberg Pursuits …
Discussion:
Business Insider and Talking Biz News
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Independent website to launch paywall for non-UK readers — New York Times-style system of 20 free articles a month is part of push to bolster Independent's multimedia credentials — The Independent, which celebrated its 25th birthday on Friday, is to launch a paywall for non-UK readers …
Discussion:
Adweek, Journalism.co.uk and The Next Web
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Bertelsmann chief to stand down — Ostrowski to resign from media organisation behind production of The X Factor and book publisher Random House — Hartmut Ostrowski, the chief executive of Bertelsmann, owner of the television production company that helps produce The X Factor …
Discussion:
New York Times
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Discovery Brings In NBCU's JB Perrette To Run Digital — It's been over a year since Discovery Communications (NSDQ: DISCA) had a dedicated executive at the very top to oversee digital operations, but that will change, now that the cable network has hired NBC (NSDQ: CMCSA) …
Discussion:
Multichannel
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Baltimore Sun Adds Metered Paywall — The Baltimore Sun is the latest newspaper to add a metered paywall, for both print and non-print subscribers. A digital subscription will cost $2.49 per week or $49.99 for 26 weeks (which works out to $99.84 per year) for non-print subscribers …
David Kaplan / paidContent:UK:
HuffPo Partners With Le Monde, LNEI On French Edition — The Huffington Post is planning a French edition—Le Huffington Post—with two established partners who will share equity: The Le Monde Group and Les Nouvelles Editions Indépendante. It was not clear if the three will own an equal share.