Top News:
New York Times:
New Orleans Newspaper Scales Back in Sign of Print Upheaval — The Times-Picayune, a 175-year-old fixture in New Orleans and a symbol of the city's gritty resilience during Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, has buckled under the pressures of the modern newspaper market.
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Steve Myers / Poynter:
Will New Orleanians follow The Times-Picayune online after it cuts back on print? — Starting this fall, New Orleans will become the largest U.S. city to go without a daily newspaper, but it won't be the first. — That distinction is held by Ann Arbor, Mich. In 2009 …
Discussion:
Jason Fry's Dorkery, Newsonomics, TheLensNola.org and Forbes
Jed Horne / The Lens:
Opinion: Changes at TP were necessary, but are they the right ones?
Opinion: Changes at TP were necessary, but are they the right ones?
Discussion:
Forbes, NetNewsCheck Latest, American Journalism Review and Blog of New Orleans, Gambit
John McQuaid / Forbes:
The Digital Future of The Times-Picayune
The Digital Future of The Times-Picayune
Discussion:
CJR, Media News, JIMROMENESKO.COM, @ryanchittum, Erik Wemple, Charles Apple, The Huffington Post, The FJP, Blog of New Orleans, Gambit, Poynter and Media Decoder
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Dish Seeks Ruling on Feature That Skips All Commercials — 6:50 p.m. | Updated | The Dish Network and three television networks filed opposing lawsuits on Thursday over Auto Hop, a feature that allows Dish subscribers to automatically skip all the advertising during most prime time shows.
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times, Radio & Television …, Reuters, Techdirt, Adweek, Chickaboomer, MediaFile, CNET, Mashable!, Broadcasting & Cable, Home Media Magazine, AdAge and The Wrap
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Matthew Belloni / Hollywood Reporter:
Fox, CBS, NBC Sue Dish Network Over AutoHop Ad-Skipper — Fox has sued Dish Network over its new Auto Hop service, which allows consumers to skip television ads. Fox issued the following statement on Thursday: … The suit, filed in U.S. District Court on Thursday on behalf of Fox Broadcasting …
Discussion:
Hollywood Reporter, Digital Trends, Forbes, paidContent, Engadget, @jbflint, The Verge, @laureni, The Next Web, @theharryshearer, Multichannel and Lost Remote
Mike Shields / Adweek:
NBCU Exploring Buyback of MSNBC.com — Chris Matthews must be getting that tingling feeling down his leg again. He and his colleagues may soon have a giant news site to call their own. — That's because NBCUniversal is in serious negotiations with Microsoft to buy back MSNBC.com.
Discussion:
Reuters, MediaPost, WebProNews, AdExchanger.com, Inside Cable News, New York Magazine, GeekWire and The Tech Trade
Farhad Manjoo / Slate:
BOMBSHELL: Business Insider Kinda Brilliant — A defense of the rapacious news aggregator. — Imagine a used car salesman who learns that the shiny Mercedes in his lot has a busted engine. He tells his friends not to go near the lemon, but when he notices a long line of people coming in to see the car …
Discussion:
@mattrosoff, @reformedbroker, MediaPost, Business Insider, Techdirt, ReadWriteWeb and The Daily Beast, Thanks:@rossneumann
New York Times:
Albany Times Union Editor Says Police Targeted His Wife's Spa — ALBANY — In early spring, the police raided a spa near the Capitol, alleging that a masseuse was actually a prostitute. — It appeared to be a minor arrest, except that the spa's owner is the wife of the investigations editor at the local newspaper, The Times Union.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM, New York Magazine, Poynter and Albany Times Union
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
A push to outlaw anonymous commenters in New York gets big eye-roll from digital media — One might have expected the news that several Republican state lawmakers in New York want to pass a law essentially banning anonymous comments on the web to be met with outrage.
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals, Erik Wemple, CNET, ThinkProgress and Techland
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Warren Buffett and Newspapers: Infatuation or Cold Calculation? — Warren Buffett. (Image credit: AFP/Getty Images via @daylife) — “For most newspapers in the United states, we would not buy them at any price,” -Warren Buffett in 2009. — “I've loved newspapers all my life …
Discussion:
Lists
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Chris O'Shea / FishbowlNY:
Warren Buffett Won't Stop Buying Newspapers Until He's Dead
Warren Buffett Won't Stop Buying Newspapers Until He's Dead
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM and Poynter
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Why rich people are investing in newspapers, again
Why rich people are investing in newspapers, again
Discussion:
Garcia Media and Forbes
Gregory Korte / USA Today:
Propaganda firm owner admits attacks on journalists — WASHINGTON - The co-owner of a major Pentagon propaganda contractor publicly admitted Thursday that he was behind a series of websites used to discredit two USA TODAY journalists who had reported on the contractor.
Discussion:
Gawker, New York Magazine, ThinkProgress, The Raw Story and Poynter
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
From cold calls to community building: ProPublica tries to make crowdsourcing more meaningful — When reporters use social media for crowdsourcing, they're often just cold calling in the form of a passing tweet — Did you lose your house to foreclosure?
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Why newspapers need to lose the ‘view from nowhere’ — Billionaire investor Warren Buffett may be buying newspapers — a move that is probably as much about cash flow and real estate as it is a long-term investment thesis — but he can't possibly buy them all, and that leaves the rest …
New York Times:
Cameron Defends Handling of Murdoch Bid — LONDON — Prime Minister David Cameron on Friday defended his handling of a contentious and ultimately doomed $12 billion bid by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation to take control of Britain's most powerful and lucrative pay-television network.
Discussion:
The Independent, Guardian, Press Gazette, Press Gazette, The Huffington Post, Guardian, Guardian, @dansabbagh, The Independent, Guardian, Media Week and Reuters
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