Top News:
Gideon Spanier / London Evening Standard:
James Murdoch quits the boards of Sun and Times — James Murdoch has dramatically resigned as a director of the companies that publish The Times, The Sunday Times and The Sun. — The surprise move, which has seen Rupert Murdoch's son quit a string of directorships at News International …
RELATED:
Nicholas Wapshott / The Daily Beast:
Why James Murdoch Might Never Take Over Rupert's Media Empire — Rupert Murdoch sees James as his last hope of keeping News Corp. under family control, but the younger man may not be able to withstand attacks from shareholders, investors, and members of Parliament, who accuse him of running a mafia racket.
Discussion:
Telegraph
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Penguin Restores Library Lending To Kindle, But Not For New E-Books — Penguin is once again making its e-books available to libraries through Kindle, OverDrive reports. New Penguin e-books, however, remain unavailable to libraries on any platform. — OverDrive's statement:
Discussion:
The Digital Shift
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Mail Online Readers Say They Will Pay, But They Won't Be Forced To — “We've done qualitative research in the UK that did tend to indicate users of Mail Online would pay something for certain aspects of the content,” DMGT CEO Martin Morgan told City analysts.
Discussion:
Daily Mail
RELATED:
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
Daily Mail publisher records operating profit drop of £13m — Results for the past year report that Associated Newspapers' operating profit fell from £89 million in 2010 to £76 million in 2011 — Operating profit for Associated Newspapers fell by £13 million in the past year …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
Dylan Welch / Sydney Morning Herald:
Investigation of political favours against News Ltd — FEDERAL police are investigating allegations that News Ltd offered a then-serving federal senator a “special relationship” involving favourable coverage if he crossed the floor on a vote of financial interest to the company.
Discussion:
Guardian
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Enda Curran / Wall Street Journal:
News Ltd. Denies Australian Senator's Claims — SYDNEY—News Corp.'s Australian unit Wednesday denied allegations that it had offered favorable coverage in return for political favors and said that it hasn't been contact by police investigating the matter, which was first reported in the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper.
Joel Gunter / Journalism.co.uk:
NI refutes lawyer's claim over ‘hacking lesson’ journalist — Lawyer's written statement removed from Leveson inquiry website after claim about News International executive challenged by the publisher — Evidence given by Mark Lewis, pictured arriving at the Leveson inquiry today …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
RELATED:
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Dear Dish Network: Your Spam Makes Me Sad. Please Stop. — I don't know how to say this any other way, so I'll be direct: Please stop with the spam. — I'm talking about crud like this, which you left in the comments of one of my stories: … Now, this pitch, written by “Andrew_K_Anderson …
Los Angeles Times:
L.A. Times Media Group makes exec changes to focus on new media — Los Angeles Times Media Group tasks four executives with increasing advertising and other revenue from digital and emerging media. — Andrea Nunn, formerly of HBO, takes on the new position of vice president of media …
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:
Future of Journalism, Runnin' Scared, Gothamist and Capital New York
RELATED:
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
NYPD ‘Loses’ the Occupy Wall Street Wikileaks Truck
NYPD ‘Loses’ the Occupy Wall Street Wikileaks Truck
Discussion:
New York Magazine and Mashable!
Michael Oneal / Chicago Tribune:
Tribune Co. to pay former CEO Randy Michaels $675K in settlement — Tribune Co. agreed to pay former chief executive Randy Michaels $675,000 in a settlement stemming from his abrupt resignation from the company on Oct. 22, 2010. — The company will also cover $50,000 in Michaels' legal fees …
Discussion:
Media Decoder
David Bauder / Associated Press:
Brian Williams' newscast outdraws NBC prime time — must wish it could start prime time a couple of hours earlier. — The network's “Nightly News” broadcast with — averaged 9.1 million viewers over five days last week, clearly outdistancing rivals at ABC and CBS.
Discussion:
TVWeek.com and Company Town