Top News:
Paul McNally / Journalism.co.uk:
QC defends scope of original phone-hacking prosecution — The leading counsel in the prosecution of Glenn Mulcaire and Clive Goodman for intercepting voicemails in 2006 has defended the decision not to broaden the scope of the trial to include other potential victims or suspects.
RELATED:
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
News International misses deadline to file its accounts
News International misses deadline to file its accounts
Discussion:
AllThingsD, Media Week, Guardian and AllThingsD
Michael Wolff / Guardian:
Rupert Murdoch's American media immunity
Rupert Murdoch's American media immunity
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and Nieman Journalism Lab
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
DPP says there was ‘pushback’ from Met over hacking investigation
DPP says there was ‘pushback’ from Met over hacking investigation
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
Lucy Manning / ITV:
Report likely to accuse hacking witnesses of misleading parliament
Report likely to accuse hacking witnesses of misleading parliament
Discussion:
paidContent
Marc Berman / New York Post:
Keith needed ‘Diva’ limos e-mails reveal — Liberal bloviator Keith Olbermann spent his last days at Current TV driving colleagues nuts with rants about “smelly” drivers who had the audacity to talk to him, according to startling e-mails obtained by The Post.
Discussion:
Capital New York and Mediaite
RELATED:
Bill Carter / Media Decoder:
Olbermann on Joining Current TV: 'I Didn't Think the Whole Thing Through'
Olbermann on Joining Current TV: 'I Didn't Think the Whole Thing Through'
Discussion:
mediabistro.com, New York Magazine and TVNewser
Chris Roush / Talking Biz News:
Reuters editor in chief received $2.7 million in 2011 — Stephen J. Adler, the editor in chief of Reuters, received total compensation of $2.7 million in 2011, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. — Adler, who joined the company in 2010 after a stint as editor …
RELATED:
Jennifer Saba / Reuters:
Ex-Thomson Reuters CEO Glocer gets nearly $20 million
David Barboza / New York Times:
Flattering News Coverage Has a Price in China — SHANGHAI — China is notorious for censoring politically delicate news coverage. But it is more than willing to let flattering news about Western and Asian businesses appear in print and broadcast media — if the price is right.
Discussion:
Reason and Media Decoder
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Time Inc. Hearst, Conde Nast, Meredith Launch “Netflix For Magazines” — Remember Next Issue Media, the “Hulu for Digital Magazines” consortium made up of the biggest names in publishing? It has finally delivered something worth talking about: Call it Netflix for Magazines.
Discussion:
Folio, VentureBeat, MarketingVox News & Trends, Nieman Journalism Lab, ZDNet, Adweek, TechCrunch, Engadget, WebProNews, Pocket-lint, PhoneArena, Media News, Media Decoder, Nxtblog, Techland, Canadian Magazines, Gizmodo, The Verge, Forbes, eMedia Vitals, @pkafka, Digits, The FJP and paidContent
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Instapaper, Readability and monetizing other people's content — There's been a minor furor brewing in the digital-content sphere over the past few days involving Readability, an app and web service that allows readers to save content from any website and read it later …
Discussion:
Melville House Books and The Brooks Review
RELATED:
Amy Chozick / Media Decoder:
Reed Hastings Will Get His HBO Go as Comcast Nears Deal on Xbox — Comcast and Time Warner are close to finalizing a deal to make the HBO Go app available on Xbox, according to several people familiar with the negotiations. — The app, which offers all of the pay cable channel's shows …
Discussion:
The Verge
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
New ASNE figures show percentage of minorities in newspaper newsrooms continues to decline — The number of minorities in the U.S. is growing, but in newspaper newsrooms it continues to creep downward. — New ASNE figures show that the percentage of minorities in newsrooms is now 12.32 percent.
Discussion:
Reflections of a Newsosaur, Jon Slattery, Gannett Blog and rjionline.org
Dan Zak / Washington Post:
Woodward and Bernstein: Could the Web generation uncover a Watergate-type scandal? — The gabby, gray-haired grand poobahs of journalism sprang from the back flaps of their book jackets onto a real-life panel Tuesday afternoon in the air-conditioned guts of the Marriott Wardman Park …
Discussion:
ShortFormBlog
Austin Carr / Fast Company:
Zite, CNN Launch Publisher Program To Ease Cease-And-Desist Concerns — Last April Fools' Day, publishers from Time Inc. to the Washington Post Company sent fast-growing startup Zite an aggressive cease-and-desist letter. The publishers weren't joking, accusing Zite's app …
Discussion:
Adweek, Poynter, VentureBeat, GigaOM and CNET
Paul Sawers / The Next Web:
Associated Press partners with Bambuser to bring citizen journalists' videos to the masses — Video-broadcasting service Bambuser was one of our top media apps of 2011, partly due to the role it played in helping to mobilize citizen journalists across the Middle East during the various periods of political uprisings.
Discussion:
GigaOM, Journalism.co.uk, Broadcast and Cision
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Stupid game lets you destroy parts of NYT story about stupid games — The Times has figured out a great way to increase time-on-site (and destroy our productivity) by illustrating a story about our obsession with “stupid games” with a game that lets you shoot and destroy parts of its website.
Discussion:
Mediaite, New York Times, Betabeat, Engadget, AllThingsD and FishbowlNY
Dawn C. Chmielewski / Company Town:
YouTube strikes movie rental deal with Paramount — Google Inc.'s YouTube has struck a movie-rental deal with a fifth major Hollywood studio, Paramount Pictures, adding 500 new titles to its expanding online library. — The addition of Paramount's films brings YouTube's rental library …
Discussion:
The Wrap, Home Media Magazine, Online Video News, AllThingsD, AdAge, Marketing Pilgrim and CNET
Sharon Waxman / The Wrap:
Former L.A. Times Editor Slams Paper For ‘Blaming Customers, Competition, Technology’ — How badly does former Los Angeles Times editor Matt Welch think the paper is doing? — Its “attitude is killing the host,” he tweeted last weekend. — I called him on Tuesday to ask him what he meant.
Discussion:
LA Observed
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Nonprofit status: A maybe for news orgs, a yes for the NFL — I like football, so I was interested in this piece over at Pro Football Talk that details the salary of National Football League commissioner Roger Goodell. (That's $11,554,000 — not bad.) But then I was surprised …
Discussion:
ProFootballTalk