Top News:
Frontline:
Murdoch's Scandal — FRONTLINE goes inside the struggle over the future of News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch's reputation and his family's fortune.
Discussion:
Guardian, PBS and Vanity Fair
RELATED:
Matt Siegel / New York Times:
Murdoch's News Ltd. Rejects TV Piracy Claim in Australia — SYDNEY — Rupert Murdoch's embattled media empire found itself facing fresh controversy on Wednesday, after an Australian newspaper published an investigative report alleging that News Corporation had engaged a special unit …
Discussion:
Media Decoder, Deadline.com, Reuters, The Independent and Australian Finance Review
Michael White / Guardian:
Rupert Murdoch: a man of prices, not values
Rupert Murdoch: a man of prices, not values
Discussion:
The Journalism Foundation and Guardian
Michael Wolff / Guardian:
Mobile and the news media's imploding business model — Smartphones will soon be the primary news source for most Americans. That's if anyone can still make money by reporting — Pew research has a new survey showing that tablets and smart phones are now 27% of Americans' primary news source.
Discussion:
Forbes and JIMROMENESKO.COM
Committee to Protect Journalists:
Two independent journalists killed in Syria — Syrian security forces shot and killed two freelance British journalists of Algerian descent and wounded a third during an attack on Monday in the town of Darkoush near the Turkish border, according to news reports and a witness interviewed by CPJ.
Discussion:
Guardian and The Journalism Foundation
RELATED:
Elizabeth Flock / Washington Post:
Are Syrian citizen journalists embellishing the truth?
Are Syrian citizen journalists embellishing the truth?
Discussion:
MediaShift Idea Lab
Mike Armstrong / Philly.com:
Investor group's offer for PMN: $60 million — A group of local investors reportedly has offered to pay $60 million to acquire the parent company of The Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News, and Philly.com. — Those investors, led by businessman Lewis Katz and insurance executive …
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM
RELATED:
Hamilton Nolan / Gawker:
University of Texas Student Paper Wins ‘Most Racist Trayvon Martin Cartoon’ Contest — Here's cartoonist Stephanie Eisner's latest political cartoon published in the Daily Texan, the student paper at the University of Texas- Austin. You can see “The Media” there, telling its lies again …
Discussion:
Business Insider, Austinist, Inside Higher Ed, Daily Texan, Human Events, The Daily Texan blogs, Hair Balls and The Huffington Post
Dashiell Bennett / The Atlantic Wire:
The New Republic Tears Down Its Pay Wall — Readers and pundits have been wondering how a new owner might change the venerable Washington political magazine, The New Republic, and they just got a early answer. A post on the magazine's blog announced early this morning that the website will drop its pay wall for recent articles.
Discussion:
The New Republic and Peter O'Kelly's Reality Check
Tim Carmody / Wired:
Bigger Than Agency, Bigger Than E-Books: The Case Against Apple and Publishers — Apple and five of the “Big Six” trade publishers are reportedly under investigation by the Department of Justice for antitrust violations. The point of concern is the five publishers' staggered but identical move …
Kelly McBride / Poynter:
ESPN should find ways to cover the Trayvon Martin story rather than become part of it — ESPN.com's Jemele Hill did a very nice, tight column this week explaining how the lives of professional athletes are connected to the life and death of Trayvon Martin. — Contrast that to ESPN's bouncing …
Discussion:
ESPN, Techdirt and The Newspaper Guild
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Bidding war for Smith book could hit $1M — Former Goldman Sachs executive Greg Smith, who resigned this month via a scathing op-ed in the New York Times, has triggered a media bidding war for his memoir of life inside the belly of the Wall Street beast. One top editor said he believed …
Discussion:
Business Insider and Gothamist
Daniel Frankel / paidContent:
Is Cable's Long, Glorious Ratings Run Finally Over? — For more than three decades, cable TV programmers enjoyed steady ratings gains—mostly at the expense of broadcasters. Inspired efforts like AMC's Mad Men and FX's Sons of Anarchy notwithstanding, those steady ratings increases sometimes belied …
Discussion:
mediabistro.com
Peter Osnos / The Atlantic Online:
Even Old Media Institutions Are Acting Like New Media — 60 Minutes has online games. The Wall Street Journal and The Times produce hours of video per day. Legacy publications have embraced social media. — The loyalty of baby boomers to print publications tends to be deeply rooted …