Top News:

Publisher and Two Top Editors Are Out at Newsweek/Daily Beast — The publisher and managing editor of Newsweek and The Daily Beast are leaving their jobs, two high-level departures that signal distress inside the company as it struggles to turn its fortunes around.
Discussion:
MinOnline, @jwpetersnyt, Mediaite, Wall Street Journal, paidContent, Adweek, The New York Observer, The Wrap, Folio, The Huffington Post and FishbowlNY
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NewsBeast Brings in Mark Miller in Shakeup — NewsBeast has brought back longtime Newsweek vet Mark Miller to oversee editorial operations, signaling continued upheaval as the magazine-news site combo struggles to win over readers and advertisers. — Miller is coming back to a newly created position of editorial operations director.

Newsweek, Mired in Red Ink, Cancels Longtime Political Series
Discussion:
WWD Media Headlines, Media & Entertainment, Poynter, FishbowlNY, Business Insider and Crikey


James Murdoch “kept in dark” on hacking: report — (Reuters) - News Corp's James Murdoch was “kept in the dark” about the scale of phone hacking at the News of the World by his subordinates who tried to manage the problem, the newspaper's former chief reporter said on Monday.
Discussion:
Guardian, Future of Journalism and I Want Media
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British Judge Investigates Journalistic Practices — LONDON — After the phone hacking scandal that has seared its way through Rupert Murdoch's newspapers in this country, a senior British judge opened an inquiry on Monday into the way journalists operate and the elusive balance between press freedom and individual rights to privacy.
Discussion:
Guardian and @jamesro47


News Corp.: Review in Australia Found No Evidence of Phone Hacking
Discussion:
ABC News

Private Investigator's Notebooks Offer New Details In Phone Hacking Case
Discussion:
Jon Slattery, Guardian, Press Gazette and The Huffington Post


Chelsea Clinton to Report for NBC — NBC is to announce on Monday morning that it has hired Chelsea Clinton to become a full-time special correspondent for NBC News. — The appointment is immediate. Ms. Clinton will show up at the news division offices oon Monday morning, said Steve Capus …
Discussion:
Jack Shafer, Media Decoder, The Wrap, Gawker, Forbes, Company Town, The Corsair, entertainment.time.com, Hot Air, PolitickerNY, Adweek, CJR, National Review, Chickaboomer, St. Petersburg Times, Washington Post, New York Magazine, The Huffington Post, TVNewser, Gothamist, Business Insider, The Daily Caller and Inside Cable News
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Chelsea Clinton's Hiring At NBC News Prompts Skeptical Reactions From Media — NEW YORK — Chelsea Clinton may have officially joined the media on Monday, but several journalists who covered the 2008 election remain skeptical about the press-averse former First Daughter entering their ranks.


Jeff Bezos Owns the Web in More Ways Than You Think — “What I'm about to show you,” Jeff Bezos says, “is the culmination of the many things we've been doing for 15 years.”
Discussion:
MediaFile, The Verge, New York Times, Engadget, GeekWire, GigaOM, Rex Hammock's RexBlog.com, Future of Journalism, Fortune, Gizmodo, Media Decoder and Wired, more at Techmeme »
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Amazon Decides To Ship Kindle Fire And Kindle Touch Early
Discussion:
CNET News, Amazon.com, GigaOM, L.A. Times Tech Blog and mediabistro.com, more at Techmeme »

Kindle Fire, First Reviews: Hot Gadget Or Just Another Lukewarm Tablet?
Discussion:
MediaPost, Forbes, Deadline.com, Amazon.com, TechCrunch, The Next Web, msnbc.com, PC Magazine, The New York Observer, ZDNet and Between the Lines Blog

Society of Editors Conference 2011 #soe11 — I am very sorry that I will not be able to attend the conference today. — Roy Greenslade has just revealed that six months ago, members of the DCMS Select Committee were the targets of covert surveillance by private investigators and journalists working for News International.
Discussion:
Guardian, Telegraph, Journalism.co.uk, News Hounds and themediablog.typepad.com
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Casting light on the News of the World shadowing of MPs
Discussion:
Media Matters for America and Business Insider


Morning TV's Tabloid Turn — As CBS goes serious for sunrise, stars at rival networks grumble about the fluffy fare. — For three frustrating DECADES, CBS has been the biggest loser in the morning. Now, rather than trying to beat Today and Good Morning America at their own game, the network wants to change the rules.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Inside Cable News, TVNewser and Chickaboomer


Exclusive: Disney Acquires “Sophisticated” Mommy Blog Platform Babble Media — Disney, which has been busy reorganizing its interactive group, is buying Babble Media, a New York-based parenting platform that features several hundred mom bloggers. — The entertainment giant declined …
Discussion:
VatorNews, Company Town, rbr.com, Business Insider and paidContent


CNN iReport Gets Major Relaunch As a ‘Social Network for News’ — Since launching five years ago, CNN's iReport has become the gold standard when it comes to traditional media companies utilizing user-generated content. Thousands of videos, photos and stories that began as posts on the site have been featured on CNN's networks.
Discussion:
NewscastStudio Blog, Future of Journalism and Lost Remote


MSNBCPOLITICO: A commanding presence for Politico on the left's favorite cable news channel — Has MSNBC opened a bureau in Arlington, Virginia? — Watch the assertively liberal cable news channel on an average day, and you're likely to see someone from Politico appearing on-screen …
Discussion:
FishbowlDC, TVNewser and Big Journalism

George Will: Wife's work on Rick Perry's campaign doesn't pose problem — Asked about Texas Gov. Rick Perry's election chances on ABC's “This Week” on Sunday, syndicated columnist George Will disclosed that his wife has joined the campaign, then proceeded to say that candidates can recover …
Discussion:
Splice Today and The Politico

From Magazine To Book: ‘CJR’ Makes the Leap — On November 15, Columbia Journalism Review will celebrate its 50th anniversary as one of the premier magazines in its field. The recognition of that long legacy will also be marked by the beginning of a new venture for the journal: Columbia Journalism Review Books.
Discussion:
CJR and The New York Observer