Top News:
Adweek:
Editorial Director Michael Wolff to Leave ‘Adweek’ — Michael Wolff leaves his post as editorial director of leading media industry publication Adweek, parent company Prometheus Global Media announced today. Executive editor Jim Cooper has been tapped to oversee the day-to-day operations …
RELATED:
Dylan Stableford / Yahoo! News:
Adweek managing editor Hillary Frey leaves for Yahoo News on heels of Michael Wolff exit — On the same day as Michael Wolff's sometimes tumultuous tenure as the editorial director of Adweek comes to end, the trade publication is losing another big name. Hillary Frey, Adweek's managing editor, is joining Yahoo News.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY
Jim Cooper / Adweek:
A Letter to Adweek's Readers
David Streitfeld / New York Times:
Amazon Rewrites the Rules of Book Publishing — SEATTLE — Amazon.com has taught readers that they do not need bookstores. Now it is encouraging writers to cast aside their publishers. — Amazon will publish 122 books this fall in an array of genres, in both physical and e-book form.
Discussion:
TeleRead, MediaFile, NYConvergence.com, GigaOM, VentureBeat, Adweek, The New York Observer, GalleyCat, FT Tech Hub and Business Insider
Steve Myers / Poynter:
WSJ Asia moves more than half of its copies through heavy discounting, like WSJ Europe — Responding to one of our posts about The Wall Street Journal Europe's use of bulk sales to, well, bulk up its circulation, a commenter questioned whether The Wall Street Journal Asia employs a similar strategy.
Discussion:
paidContent
RELATED:
Frédéric Filloux / Guardian:
How can we stop publishers inflating circulation? — The WSJ Europe ‘scam’ highlights the fact that audiences, print or digital, are often artificially bought rather than naturally sold — Surprise: To boost its circulation, Rupert Murdoch's Wall Street Journal Europe engaged in massive channel stuffing.
Discussion:
Reflections of a Newsosaur and Free Press
Gabriel Sherman / New York Magazine:
83 Minutes With Chrystia Freeland — Fielding a faux pitch by the new, Davos-friendly face of Reuters, who's trying to build a team to take on Bloomberg. — We have the money," Chrystia Freeland tells me one recent afternoon on the nineteenth-floor newsroom of Reuters' gleaming Times Square tower.
Los Angeles Times:
McDonald's to launch in-store channel — Mark Burnett, BBC America and KABC-TV Eyewitness News will provide content for dine-in customers. — McDonald's customers will soon be able to have local school sports, movie previews and heartwarming human interest stories to go with their fries — McTV is here and in high definition.
Discussion:
AdPulp, Deadline.com, rbr.com, PopWatch, The Huffington Post, FishbowlNY, AdAge and TVWeek.com
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Scoop: Skype founders gunning for Netflix with Vdio — Updated. With Skype's sale to Microsoft finally sealed, one might wonder: What are Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, the European serial entrepreneurs that have founded KaZaA, Skype, Joost and Rdio, up to next?
Discussion:
GigaOM, VentureBeat, PC Magazine, CNET News, Between the Lines Blog, Electronista, ReadWriteWeb, Gizmodo, Engadget, Business Insider and TechNet Blogs
Ken Auletta / New Yorker:
Amir Efrati / Wall Street Journal:
Weakening Ad Business Vexes Yahoo Amid Sale Talk — As Yahoo Inc. shops itself to potential buyers, its core advertising business is weakening. That trend is evident through Craig Atkinson's ad agency. — Mr. Atkinson is president of ad giant Omnicom Media Group's PHD unit …
Discussion:
Forbes, MediaFile and PC Magazine, more at Techmeme »
Keach Hagey / The Politico:
Pew: Media not in love with Obama — Sarah Palin put an end to her possible presidential candidacy this month with a familiar parting critique: President Barack Obama has an unfair advantage as a candidate because he's got “about 90 percent of the media still there in his back pocket.”
Discussion:
Journalism.org, The Huffington Post, New York Magazine and Poynter
Jolie O'Dell / VentureBeat:
UberMedia launches Twitter/Digg/Reddit/Facebook clone Chime.in — UberMedia CEO Bill Gross isn't dodging the fact that his latest app, Chime.in, is a patchwork of other successful apps. — “It's an amalgam of blogging and Reddit and Facebook — there's aspects of each in there,” he told VentureBeat in a phone interview last week.
Discussion:
CNET News, Adweek, TechCrunch, AllThingsD, MediaFile, Mashable!, Forbes and GigaOM, more at Techmeme »
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
John Miller to Join CBS, Bolstering ‘The Early Show’ — Every week or so comes another signal that CBS is reshaping “The Early Show,” its low-rated morning newscast. On Monday will come another: the announcement that John Miller is joining the network as a senior correspondent with a special emphasis on the morning show.
Discussion:
TVNewser, FishbowlNY, LA Observed, Broadcasting & Cable, TVWeek.com and The Wrap
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
Times libel appeal reaches Supreme Court — The Times announced in July last year it would seek to appeal a judgment which found the newspaper was not entitled to a defence of qualified privilege based on the Reynolds test of responsible journalism — The Supreme Court will consider whether …
Discussion:
Guardian
Valentina Gimenez / MediaShift:
In Spain, ‘Little Black Book’ of Journalism Shows Profession in Crisis — Pressure from the publishing industry has weakened the watchdog role of journalists, turning them into lapdogs at the service of — corporations and politicians and unable to serve their readers.
Jacob Caggiano / Seattle Journalism Commons:
KING5 gives away $10,000 check at #HackingNews — Hackathons are getting trendy. Not just in journalism, but health care, education, entrepreneurism, crisis management, mobile tech, government, and other arenas. Yes, it's another technology buzz word, but one that hopefully sticks around and evolves into a combustible formula.
Discussion:
Poynter
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
The Times hails 10% rise in digital subscribers — The number of people paying for a digital version of the Times has risen to just over 110,000, according to new figures — The number of people paying for a digital version of the Times has risen 10% in the past three months to just over 110,000, according to new figures.
Discussion:
Media Week, The Drum and Journalism.co.uk
Richard L. Brandt / Wall Street Journal:
Jeff Bezos of Amazon: Birth of a Salesman — Behind the rise of Jeff Bezos and Amazon: Richard L. Brandt on the founder's Texas roots, the site's chaotic early days, why negative reviews are allowed and his increasing use of personal data. — Jeffrey Preston Bezos was 4 years old …
Discussion:
Business Insider
Steve Myers / Poynter:
NPR's Andy Carvin takes Twitter break to write book about covering Arab Spring via social media — Just after he logged his 100,000th tweet, NPR's Andy Carvin told people on Twitter that he's taking the week off so he can work on a book about covering the Arab Spring via social media.
Discussion:
EJC
Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
Hulu Puts Owners in New Quandary — Now that big media companies have decided not to sell online-video venture Hulu LLC, they have to figure out what to do with it. — News Corp., Walt Disney Co. and Providence Equity Partners LLC said late last week that they were abandoning efforts …
Discussion:
Adweek and Company Town
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Former Time exec Sareyan tapped to run National Journal — David Bradley, the multi-millionaire magazine owner who turned his first-ever profit at The Atlantic last year, is now focusing on jump-starting his National Journal. — He's just hired Andy Sareyan, a former top executive of Time Inc …
Discussion:
Folio, MinOnline, On Media's Blog, Adweek and FishbowlNY
Jennifer Preston / Media Decoder:
A Print Focus on Social Media — Four new monthly magazines advising business owners on how to use social media tools will go on sale on Monday. Each publication focuses on one of the major platforms: Twitter, Facebook, Google and LinkedIn. — The magazines, published by GSG World Media …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Republican Debates Are a Hot Ticket on TV — In September 2007, Fox News put Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Ron Paul, Rudy Giuliani and a man who was, back then, a long shot for the Republican presidential nomination, John McCain, on a debate stage in New Hampshire.
Discussion:
Washington Post, ABCNEWS, TVNewser, Adweek and CNN
Dan Roberts / Guardian:
Lessons from our open news trial — The first week of the Guardian's experiment in publishing its news lists has reaped advantages, but more is needed — Well, the sky didn't fall in. One week in, and the remarkable thing about our experiment publishing The Guardian's list of upcoming stories …
Discussion:
Poynter and Jon Slattery
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Adam Moss: NY Mag publishes new content every six minutes — Here's a tidbit that will likely make your organizational productivity seem wildly inadequate: NYmag.com publishes new material every six minutes. Every six minutes. — You're welcome. — In a talk celebrating the 25th anniversary …
Discussion:
Poynter
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
Rupert Murdoch, Bill Clinton Attend Steve Jobs Memorial Service — A memorial held for Steve Jobs yesterday at Stanford University attracted a bunch of big names, including News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch, with whom Jobs was slated to unveil the Daily iPad newspaper, before he took his leave of absence.
Discussion:
Bits, Fortune and Digits, more at Techmeme »