Top News:
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Andy Coulson voicemails allegedly hacked — Voicemails left by Andy Coulson for the aide to former Labour home secretary Charles Clarke are believed to be among those allegedly hacked while he was editor of the News of the World. Coulson is one of a number of journalists whose messages …
Discussion:
New Statesman and Huffington Post UK
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Media Monkey / Guardian:
Michel expected to hold nerve at Leveson
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Leveson inquiry: Hunt's permanent secretary to appear on Friday
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
It's official: Chicago Reader sold to Sun-Times parent — A memo from group publisher Alison Draper and CFO Tammy Bailey to Creative Loafing employees confirms the sale: … The likely sale to Wrapports was first reported about two weeks ago. — The Reader and Washington City Paper …
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
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Michael Miner / Chicago Reader:
Wrapports buys the Reader — Wrapports LLC, the collection of high-flying investors who own the Sun-Times and Sun-Times Media, have added the Reader to their stable, buying this 41-year-old weekly-which the Wrapports news release chooses to call “iconic”—for slightly under $3 million.
Jay Greene / CNET:
How Amazon is changing the rules for books and movies — Amazon Studios is crowdsourcing movie-making, creating test movies, that fans can review, with storyboard art in the place of video, like this image from a possible upcoming release called “Touching Blue.”
Discussion:
The Wrap, Digital Book World, PC Magazine, Home Media Magazine and The Daily Beast
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Greg Sandoval / CNET:
Amazon Prime acquires access to Paramount films
Amazon Prime acquires access to Paramount films
Discussion:
Home Media Magazine and TechCrunch
Jason Del Rey / AdAge:
Huffington Post Gets Its First Publisher Amid Broader AOL Changes — Janet Balis Takes Post While AOL Chief Revenue Officer Ned Brody Also Gets New Role — In his company's most recent earnings call, AOL CEO Tim Armstrong said he wanted to restructure the company in a way that made …
Discussion:
Media & Entertainment, MediaPost, NetNewsCheck Latest, AllThingsD, FishbowlNY, Adweek, Capital New York and The Huffington Post
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Roku and Dish partner on new foreign TV streaming service — Dish Network has partnered with Roku to launch a new, streaming-only service that will be sold to customers across the U.S., regardless of whether they're subscribers of Dish's pay TV offering or not, both companies announced Wednesday morning.
Discussion:
The Official Roku Blog, Broadcasting & Cable, PC Magazine, TechCrunch and CNET
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Katharine Zaleski leaves Washington Post — Executive Editor Marcus Brauchli announced to staff today that Katharine Zaleski, the Washington Post's executive director of digital news, will be leaving the news organization to join Planet Daily, where she'll be managing editor.
Discussion:
Betabeat
Jim Romenesko:
Larry Platt resigns as Philadelphia Daily News editor — Philadelphia Daily News editor Larry Platt says he's leaving the paper after just a year and a half. “I never looked at this gig as a long-term play for me,” he tells his staff. Larry Platt “I have long loved the Daily News …
Discussion:
Philly.com, @ckrewson and Off Mic
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
If Video Sites Could Act Like Cable Companies — BOSTON — Most consumers have no idea what an M.V.P.D. is, but they mail a check to one every month. What they call Comcast or Time Warner Cable or DirecTV, the government calls a “multichannel video programming distributor,” or M.V.P.D. for short.
Discussion:
The Verge
Julie Moos / Poynter:
Several people reportedly stabbed at Topeka TV station — Staffers at WIBW in Topeka, Kan., subdued a “disgruntled man” this morning at the TV station. Morning news co-anchor Amanda Lanum tweeted events as they unfolded, as did other staffers. Their tweets say the man had a knife and stabbed …
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Survey: NPR's listeners best-informed, Fox viewers worst-informed — People who watch no news at all can answer more questions about international current events than people who watch cable news, a survey by Fairleigh Dickinson University's PublicMind finds.
Discussion:
Erik Wemple, Mediaite, Hit & Run and The Huffington Post
Jim Romenesko:
McClatchy to begin ‘robust test’ of pay model — McClatchy vice president of news Anders Gyllenhaal tells employees that “after more than a year of experiments and analysis on pay models, McClatchy newspapers will begin a robust test of a pay plan that looks like the right balance for our websites.”
Discussion:
MediaPost and Random Pixels and Loose Talk
Michael Wolff / Technology Review:
The Facebook Fallacy: For all its valuation, the social network is just another ad-supported site. Without an earth-changing idea, it will collapse and take down the Web. — For all its valuation, the social network is just another ad-supported site. Without an earth-changing idea, it will collapse and take down the Web.
Discussion:
Mashable!, Poynter, ReadWriteWeb, NetNewsCheck Latest, Guardian, Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog, New York Magazine, @ckrewson and @jayrosen_nyu
David Kravets / Wired:
New York Legislation Would Ban Anonymous Online Speech — Did you hear the one about the New York state lawmakers who forgot about the First Amendment in the name of combating cyberbullying and “baseless political attacks”? — Proposed legislation in both chambers would require New York-based websites …
Discussion:
Betabeat, Mediaite, Guardian, The Atlantic Wire, The Daily Caller, New York Magazine, Techdirt, Runnin' Scared, News RSS : Today, Gothamist, Mashable!, CNET, NYConvergence.com, ANIMAL and Digital Trends
Erik Wemple:
Washington Times takes de Borchgrave's recent columns offline — On Monday night, the Washington Times announced that it would conduct an inquiry into the work of longtime columnist Arnaud de Borchgrave, following allegations that he'd lifted material from other sources on the Internet.
Discussion:
FishbowlDC, The Corsair and Washington Post