Top News:
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
News of the World paid me to follow 90 people, claims private detective — Former policeman says he surveilled figures including Prince William and the parents of Harry Potter actor Daniel Radcliffe — A private detective has claimed the News of the World paid him to target more than 90 people …
Discussion:
Business Insider and The Lede
Julie Moos / Poynter:
The Daily names original Herman Cain accuser, other news orgs follow — Journalists protected the identities of two women who accused Herman Cain of sexual misconduct, until Tuesday when iPad publication The Daily identified one of them as Karen Kraushaar. After The Daily published Kraushaar's name …
Discussion:
New York Post, The Daily, The Huffington Post, Mediaite, Gawker, NPR, New York Times, The Daily Caller and Business Insider
RELATED:
Kelly McBride / Poynter:
Why did journalists act as a pack in withholding names of Herman Cain's accusers?
Why did journalists act as a pack in withholding names of Herman Cain's accusers?
Discussion:
New York Post, NetNewsCheck Latest and The Caucus
Dean Starkman / CJR:
Confidence Game — “The question that mass amateurization poses to traditional media is ‘What happens when the costs of reproduction and distribution go away? What happens when there is nothing unique about publishing anymore because users can do it for themselves?’
Ben Dowell / Guardian:
Jeremy Hunt tried to delay broadcast of Panorama's Fifa exposé — Culture secretary understood to have called BBC director general about timing of broadcast ahead of 2018 World Cup vote — Culture secretary Jeremy Hunt personally intervened in a failed attempt to delay …
Discussion:
Future of Journalism
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Twitter and journalism: It shouldn't be that complicated — The Associated Press caused a minor furor recently when the news-wire service updated its social-media policy and forbade its writers from expressing any opinions on Twitter, including implied opinions caused by retweeting others.
Discussion:
Poynter and Future of Journalism
Evan Hansen / Wired.com:
Wired.com Goes Creative Commons: 50 Great Images That Are Now Yours — From NIN Dazzles With Lasers, LEDs and Stealth Screens — Wired.com photographers have the enviable job of shooting the coolest stuff and most intriguing people in the technology world. Now we're giving away many of those photos to you, the public, for free.
Discussion:
Media Decoder, The New York Observer and Future of Journalism
RELATED:
David Carr / New York Times:
Jackson Doctor Trial Fails to Ignite Audience Interest — In a bit of anticlimax, Dr. Conrad Murray was found guilty late in the day on Monday of involuntary manslaughter two-and-a-half years after the death of Michael Jackson. Networks broke in for live coverage, cable networks hit …
RELATED:
Kimberly Nordyke / Hollywood Reporter:
MSNBC to Air Documentary About Conrad Murray Trial Four Days After Guilty Verdict
MSNBC to Air Documentary About Conrad Murray Trial Four Days After Guilty Verdict
Discussion:
TVNewser and mediabistro.com
Foster Kamer / The New York Observer:
NY Daily News Layoffs Massacre Continues: Two More Shown The Door, Bringing Total Count to 16 — The bad news keeps coming at the New York Daily News. Another two staffers have been let go, and the rumor is that there are more to come. We've received word that Michael Bowers …
Joel Gunter / Journalism.co.uk:
Leveson rejects bid for police review of inquiry evidence — Lord Leveson has largely rejected a submission by the CPS and Met police calling for the police to make decisions about witnesses and evidence in his public inquiry — Lord Leveson, who is due to begin hearing evidence next week …
RELATED:
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
Phone hacking: Tom Crone admits ‘incorrect’ evidence
Phone hacking: Tom Crone admits ‘incorrect’ evidence
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
Steve Myers / Poynter:
SC newspaper reporter proposes in column — “I'd like to tell you about someone very close to my heart,” writes reporter Nick McCormac at the beginning of a column published Tuesday. “I promise you, it's worth your time to read through to the end.” After describing how he and his girlfriend met …
Discussion:
Item
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Steve Jobs May Be Time's First Dead Person of the Year — For all the hosannas he elicited, Steve Jobs was never named Time magazine's Person of the Year, a snub that rankled him considerably. Now that he's dead, he may finally win the distinction that eluded him in life.
Discussion:
The New York Observer and Forbes
Kim Willsher / Guardian:
Max Mosley wins French privacy action against News of the World — NoW publisher to pay £32,000 after being found guilty of violating former F1 boss's privacy — The publisher of the News of the World has been ordered by a French court to pay £32,000 in costs and damages …
Discussion:
Press Gazette, Business Insider and Journalism.co.uk
Michael Oneal / Chicago Tribune:
New twist in Tribune Co. bankruptcy case could benefit billionaire Sam Zell — Judge's finding for holders of certain notes could support recovery claims of company chairman — A bankrupcty court judge's ruling could mean that Tribune Co. Chairman Sam Zell, who engineered a leveraged buyout …
Discussion:
LA Observed, rbr.com and Poynter
John Koblin / WWD:
The New Yorker Names Creative Director — ALWAYS A FIRST: Condé Nast's digital magazine design director Wyatt Mitchell has been tapped to become The New Yorker's first-ever creative director. Mitchell, who has been the number two to Condé Nast's design guru Scott Dadich …
Dylan Byers / Adweek:
Josh Tyrangiel Means Business — Josh Tyrangiel has a preposterous mission: to convince readers that a weekly business magazine left for dead two years ago is now a must-read. — That would be challenging enough in a good market. But in 2011, with print advertising still in crisis …
Discussion:
Poynter, FishbowlNY and Business Insider
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
Hotel owner considers buying San Diego Union-Tribune — Politically active San Diego developer Doug Manchester says “there's lots of people interested in that asset” — the paper owns 13 acres of prime real estate — and that “we're looking at it.” (Platinum Equity, the paper's owner since 2009 …
Discussion:
Voice of San Diego
Michael Malone / Broadcasting & Cable:
Scripps TV Revenue Down 11% in Quarter — E.W. Scripps reported station revenue of $69.9 million in the third quarter, an 11% decrease from the same quarter a year ago. Excluding political advertising from the 2011 and 2010 totals, revenue increased 6.5%. — Local revenue was up 11%, while national advertising fell 6.6%.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest and rbr.com
Kat Stoeffel / The New York Observer:
Dan Klaidman Returns to Newsweek — A former Newsweek veteran, Dan Klaidman, has rejoined The Newsweek Daily Beast Company, editor in chief Tina Brown announced to staff today. Mr. Klaidman was Newsweek's managing editor until February. Among the last of the old guard editors to leave …
Discussion:
mediabistro.com
Cary Sherman / CNET News:
RIAA chief: Copyright bills won't kill the Internet — Editor's note: This is a guest column. It is a rebuttal to a column written by Molly Wood, a CNET editor and published October 31. — Let's all take a deep breath. — RIAA CEO Cary Sherman — That's what we do every …
Jonathan Pearlman / Telegraph:
Papua New Guinea reporter undergoes circumcision to get the scoop — A Papua New Guinea reporter who agreed to be circumcised with bamboo sticks to secure an interview with a group of jungle rebels has won a journalism award for “best scoop”. — The journalist, Simon Eroro …
Discussion:
The Huffington Post and Gawker