Top News:
Media Decoder:
New Republic Gets an Owner Steeped in New Media — The newest owner of The New Republic magazine is Chris Hughes, a new-media guru who co-founded Facebook and helped to run the online organizing machine for Barack Obama's presidential campaign. — Mr. Hughes's purchase of a majority stake …
Discussion:
MinOnline, Capital New York, Adweek, Folio, Betabeat, The New York Observer, paidContent, The Huffington Post, eMedia Vitals, mediabistro.com and Business Insider
RELATED:
The New Republic:
Home News: A Letter to TNR Readers from Chris Hughes — To the Readers of The New Republic: — Nearly 100 years ago, the founding editors of The New Republic wrote these words to introduce their inaugural issue: … A century later, people are once again skeptical that quality journalism can flourish.
Discussion:
National Review, New York Magazine, NPR, CNNMoney.com, The Awl, Globe and Mail, The Next Web, The New Yorker Blog, Poynter, Vanity Fair and Business Insider
Dylan Byers / Politico:
Alan Grayson pitches TNR subscribers — Alan Grayson, the former Democratic Representative from Florida's 8th, is back on the campaign trail and soliciting support from subscribers of The New Republic, the century-old liberal magazine that — as of today — is owned and published by 28-year-old Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes.
Tim Carmody / Wired:
I Think It Would Be Fun to Run the New Republic: Chris Hughes as Charles Foster Kane
I Think It Would Be Fun to Run the New Republic: Chris Hughes as Charles Foster Kane
Discussion:
Media Decoder
Ryan Tate / Gawker:
Twitter's Secret History As the World's Worst Tech or Media Business — Twitter Inc.'s been spinning quite a turnaround story in the press lately. The microblogging service “has finally turned a corner,” declares the cover of Bloomberg Businessweek. “It's a juggernaut,” a company executive tells the magazine.
Discussion:
Business Insider, The Next Web, @benpopper and @pkafka
RELATED:
Press Gazette:
First official figures give The Sun Sunday 3.2m circ — ABC today released the first official figures for The Sun Sunday - showing a launch circulation of 3,213,613 for the new title. In its final month before it was closed the News of the World had an average monthly circulation of 2,667,428.
Discussion:
Guardian
RELATED:
Dan Sabbagh / Guardian:
Leveson inquiry: nearly £2m spent on press investigation since last summer — Almost £100,000 a month of taxpayers' money is being used to fund a handful of barristers, including Robert Jay — The Leveson inquiry has spent almost £2m since it was set up last summer …
Guardian:
Ofcom steps up test of James Murdoch's fitness to keep BSkyB role
Ofcom steps up test of James Murdoch's fitness to keep BSkyB role
Discussion:
Company Town and Reuters
Dominic Ponsford / Press Gazette:
Injunction threat over Will Lewis security blog post
Injunction threat over Will Lewis security blog post
Discussion:
Neville Thurlbeck
Stephen Parkinson / Telegraph:
Phone hacking: can these journalists really get a fair trial?
Phone hacking: can these journalists really get a fair trial?
Discussion:
CJR, Jon Slattery and Guardian
Erik Larson / Bloomberg:
News Corp. Alleged to Hack Family Priest's Line
News Corp. Alleged to Hack Family Priest's Line
Discussion:
Guardian, Guardian, The Next Web and Guardian
Matt Thompson / The Mozilla Blog:
The New York Times joins Mozilla and Knight Foundation to drive open innovation in news — The New York Times and three other leading global news organizations are joining “Knight-Mozilla OpenNews,” a partnership aimed at driving open source innovation in news.
Discussion:
Dan Sinker and The Next Web
Bonnie Kavoussi / The Huffington Post:
Felix Salmon At Columbia Journalism School: Don't Blame Journalists For Failing To Prevent Financial Crisis — Some business reporters have a message for critics who say they did not try hard enough to expose banks' misdeeds before the financial crisis: Don't blame us.
Discussion:
Talking Biz News
Matt Rosoff / Business Insider:
Newspapers Are The Fastest Shrinking Industry In The U.S. — If you want to be a journalist, think online. — Newspapers have shed a greater percentage of jobs since 2007 than any other industry in the United States, according to data published today by LinkedIn.
Discussion:
The LinkedIn Blog, Noted, Jon Slattery, Poynter and WebProNews
Yinka Adegoke / MediaFile:
Could a Netflix-cable alliance spur HBO to go rogue? — A potential alliance between online video streaming company Netflix Inc <NFLX.O> and cable companies could spur cable television's biggest premium player HBO to consider its options beyond the set-top box and go directly to customers on the Web.
Discussion:
CNET, NetNewsCheck Latest and Mashable
RELATED:
Amy Chozick / Media Decoder:
Comcast Declines to Offer Netflix to Its Customers
Comcast Declines to Offer Netflix to Its Customers
Discussion:
VentureBeat, The Verge, the Econsultancy blog, Home Media Magazine and fiercecable.com/news/frontpage
Lucas Shaw / The Wrap:
Billboard Publisher, Editor Out, Other Top Staffers Follow — Billboard Magazine is bleeding top talent, with publisher Lisa Ryan Howard and editor-in-chief Danyel Smith handing in their walking papers, TheWrap has learned. — In addition, deputy editor Lou Hau and other high-level staffers …
Michael Learmonth / AdAge:
TV Power NBC Universal Joins Web Video ‘Upfront’ — Owner of TV Networks to Display Digital Content Alongside YouTube, Yahoo and Hulu — The confederation of internet companies planning two weeks of “upfront” presentations for advertisers this spring are getting an unexpected new member: NBC Universal.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest and Media & Entertainment, Thanks:@learmonth
Michael S. Rosenwald / Washington Post:
For tablet computer visionary Roger Fidler, a lot of what-ifs — COLUMBIA, Mo. — Roger Fidler, in jeans and a black turtleneck, is watching Steve Jobs, in jeans and a black turtleneck, introduce the iPad. Fidler is sitting in his stark white office — the late Apple co-founder adored white's simplicity …
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Germany Wants To Charge Search Engines To Use News Excerpts — Germany's government wants search engines and news aggregators to pay news publishers for using pieces of their material. — Its coalition committee has resolved that a collecting society should charge royalties to re-publishers of news material.
Discussion:
WebProNews and The Register