Top News:
Erika Fry / CJR:
Zuccotti Park's Airspace Was Never Closed — Did the New York's police close airspace to prevent news helicopters from getting footage of police action against Occupy Wall Street protesters? — That is certainly the story—it has been widely reported by outlets including The New York Times …
Discussion:
Runnin' Scared, The Huffington Post and Gothamist
RELATED:
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
News Organizations Complain About Treatment During Protests — A cross-section of 13 news organizations in New York City lodged complaints on Monday about the New York Police Department's treatment of journalists covering the Occupy Wall Street movement. Separately, 10 press clubs …
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Groundswell, The New York Observer, FishbowlNY, Future of Journalism and Capital New York
Michael Powell / New York Times:
Reporters Meet the Fists of the Law — In the aftermath of the Occupy Wall Street eviction from Zuccotti Park, a mayoral aide e-mailed reporters. — The aide, Stu Loeser, said that he had heard of journalists “supposedly” wearing police press badges who “allegedly encountered problems on the streets of New York.”
Discussion:
Associated Press, Prof Chris Daly's Blog, Capital New York and PolitickerNY
Joel Gunter / Journalism.co.uk:
Leveson calls for Mail on Sunday journalists to give evidence — Newspaper's lawyer tells Leveson that journalists behind a story Hugh Grant alleged was obtained through phone hacking could appear to give evidence — Lord Leveson has called for journalists from the Mail and Mail on Sunday …
Discussion:
Crikey, Digital Spy, Journalism.co.uk, Guardian, Press Gazette, Future of Journalism and Journalism.co.uk
RELATED:
Mimi Turner / Hollywood Reporter:
Daily Mail Accused of ‘Intimidating’ Hugh Grant After the Actor's Leveson Testimony
Daily Mail Accused of ‘Intimidating’ Hugh Grant After the Actor's Leveson Testimony
Discussion:
Guardian, Reuters and Daily Mail
Jesse Holcomb / Journalism.org:
Biggest Week Yet for Occupy Wall Street Coverage — A series of police crackdowns resulted in the biggest week of Occupy Wall Street media coverage since the protests began two months ago. And for the second week in a row, the stunning sexual abuse scandal at Penn State University registered as the No. 2 story in the nation.
RELATED:
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
NYPD ‘Loses’ the Occupy Wall Street Wikileaks Truck
NYPD ‘Loses’ the Occupy Wall Street Wikileaks Truck
Discussion:
New York Magazine, Mashable! and MOTHERBOARD
Washington Post Newspaper Guild:
BEWARE! Post Quietly Pushing Out Employees — As some of you may have already heard or suspected after several cake-less departures this year, the Washington Post has pushed out - or is trying to push out - at least thirteen people through layoffs, coerced buyouts or outright dismissal on dubious charges.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Future of Journalism and JIMROMENESKO.COM
RELATED:
Reuters:
Netflix shares hurt by bleak 2012 outlook — (Reuters) - Netflix Inc's shares dropped as much as 7 percent on Tuesday after it warned of a loss for 2012, a move the prompted several Wall Street analysts to cut their price targets for the online video and DVD rental company.
Discussion:
MediaFile, more at Techmeme »
RELATED:
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Why the Netflix Buyback Strategy Worked Like Magic — Until It Totally Failed
Why the Netflix Buyback Strategy Worked Like Magic — Until It Totally Failed
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, Digital Spy, Forbes, rbr.com and paidContent:UK
Larry Dignan / ZDNet:
Netflix eases liquidity worries, raises more questions
Gary Sinderson / TVNewsCheck:
Why The Penn State Scandal Stayed Secret — WJAC Johnstown, Pa., reporter Gary Sinderson says the university's culture of protecting its reputation and limited time prevented him from investigating the “whispers” about former coach Jerry Sandusky. Corporate downsizing has eliminated a lot of enterprise reporting.
Discussion:
Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog and TVSpy
Ryan Kearney / TBD:
Associated Press' Christopher Walken story proves why their Twitter policy is foolish — Last Wednesday, Daily Intel revealed that a leaked internal “e-mail sent from on high” at the Associated Press scolded reporters for violating the wire service's Twitter policy.
Discussion:
GigaOM
RELATED:
Nat Ives / AdAge:
Glamour Publisher Jason Wagenheim Out After Three Months, Wackermann Resumes Direct Responsibility — Conde Nast Said to Seek New Role for Wagenheim — Bill Wackermann, the exec VP-publishing director responsible for Glamour and previously Glamour's publisher since 2004 …
Discussion:
Adweek, MinOnline, Media Decoder and FishbowlNY
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
Women journalists confront harassment, sexism when using social media — As journalists venture into a brave new world of social media, some find they have to be braver than others. — Women journalists face new forms of harassment, sexist comments, or worse, from social networkers.
Frederic Lardinois / SiliconFilter:
Google News Now Features Limited Social Recommendations Based on +1s — Google today announced a small but important new Google+-powered feature for Google News. While there are currently a plethora of startups that are trying to provide their users with personalized news experience based …
Discussion:
Mashable!, VentureBeat, Search Engine Land, Google News Blog and Future of Journalism
David Trilling / Foreign Policy:
Propagandastan — BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan - When people read a news website, they don't usually imagine that it is being run by a major producer of fighter jets and smart bombs. But when the Pentagon has its own vision of America's foreign policy, and the funds to promote it …
Discussion:
Hit & Run
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Colarusso Jumps From Bloomberg TV To Reuters — Dan Colarusso, who has held top editorial posts at the NY Post, Condé Nast's Portfolio and briefly at Business Insider, is leaving his post as managing editor of Bloomberg Television to join rival Reuters (NYSE: TRI) as the news service's global head of programming.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and TVNewser