Top News:
Wyatt Williams / Creative Loafing Atlanta:
Can Don Lemon set CNN straight? — Cable news is broken and the ‘CNN Newsroom’ anchor could be the guy to fix it — Earlier this year, “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” ran a segment titled “CNN's Don Lemon appears to not care for CNN.” The clip shows the Atlanta-based “CNN Newsroom” …
Discussion:
The Maynard Institute, Mediaite, TVNewser and Chickaboomer
Ben Farmer / Telegraph:
Congress calls on Twitter to block Taliban — American congressmen are calling on Twitter to block Taliban propagandists from the micro-blogging site. — Aides for Joe Lieberman, chair of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said the move was part of a wider attempt …
Discussion:
Future of Journalism, more at Techmeme »
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
Caseby's squalid note to The Guardian editor shows News International's true face — I was surprised when I switched on Newsnight last week to hear that Nick Davies had refused to take part in a discussion with The Sun's managing editor, Richard Caseby. — I've known Davies for more than 35 years …
RELATED:
The Independent:
For Leveson, the ‘what ifs’ that must follow The Guardian's clarification are legion — The last day of the Leveson Inquiry before the Christmas recess threw up two developments with the potential to be game-changers. First, on the basis that he overheard show-business journalists talking …
Discussion:
Future of Journalism, Guardian and The Huffington Post
David Carr / New York Times:
Rules for the New Ways of Watching — For the last year, media pundits like me have been running around screaming our heads off about falling skies and collapsing paradigms, and yet as 2011 comes to end, the sky is still there. — Yes, competition is storming out of every device and connection …
Dean Starkman / CJR:
The Hole In FON Theory — Continuing the discussion about the future of news with Clay Shirky — I thank Clay Shirky and other posters for their responses to “Confidence Game: the limited vision of the news gurus.” Since Clay and I are going to differ on a few things …
RELATED:
Jack Shafer:
OTUS and the golden age of political reporting — Just what the country needed: Another political Web site. — At the beginning of the week, ABC News launched OTUS, its political news supermarket with its top political reporters (Jake Tapper, Jonathan Karl, Amy Walter, and George Stephanopoulos) hunkering on the site's home page.
Discussion:
Future of Journalism, @romenesko and Cision
Edmund Lee / Bloomberg:
Times Co. Calls Union Back to Negotiate — New York Times Co. (NYT) contacted union leaders about restarting contract negotiations a day after the publisher announced last week the retirement of Chief Executive Officer Janet Robinson, according to the local Newspaper Guild.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY
RELATED:
Adam Clark Estes / The Atlantic Wire:
It Costs a Fortune for The New York Times to Cut Costs
It Costs a Fortune for The New York Times to Cut Costs
Discussion:
Future of Journalism and New York Post
Mona Zhang / 10,000 Words:
Growth of Twitter Fueled by Media Coverage — A new study by MIT, which seeks to understand Twitter's “contagion process,” has found that news media played a crucial role in the site's growth. The study tracked development from 2006 to 2009, and also found that more traditional forms of social networking …
Discussion:
UnBeige
Randall Stross / New York Times:
Publishers vs. Libraries: An E-Book Tug of War — LAST year, Christmas was the biggest single day for e-book sales by HarperCollins. And indications are that this year's Christmas Day total will be even higher, given the extremely strong sales of e-readers like the Kindle and the Nook.
Vadim Lavrusik / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Curation and amplification will become much more sophisticated in 2012 — Editor's Note: We're wrapping up 2011 by asking some of the smartest people in journalism what the new year will bring. — Next up is Vadim Lavrusik, Journalist Program Manager at Facebook. — Ladies and gentlemen, we can rebuild it.
David Barstow / New York Times:
Pentagon Finds No Fault in Ties to TV Analysts — A Pentagon public relations program that sought to transform high-profile military analysts into “surrogates” and “message force multipliers” for the Bush administration complied with Defense Department regulations and directives …
Discussion:
@romenesko