Top News:
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Woman arrested over alleged money laundering — A 42-year-old woman has been arrested by police investigating phone hacking on suspicion of money-laundering offences. The woman was arrested by appointment at a south-west London police station on Monday morning by Metropolitan police detectives from Operation Weeting.
Discussion:
@joshhalliday and Press Gazette
RELATED:
Guardian:
Leveson inquiry: Blair says newspapers used as ‘instruments of political power’ — Tony Blair has told the Leveson inquiry that Rupert Murdoch and other proprietors use their newspapers “as instruments of political power”, with the Sun and Daily Mail being the two most powerful.
Discussion:
Press Gazette, @hackinginquiry and @tomjharper
Guardian:
Tony Blair accused of war crimes by protester at Leveson inquiry — Lord Justice Leveson has ordered an investigation into security procedures at his inquiry into the media after a protester burst into the courtroom to shout at Tony Blair while the former prime minister gave evidence.
Discussion:
Associated Press, @skynewsbreak, @skynewsbreak and The Independent
Daily Mail:
Going Viral: No 10 press chief berates BBC man — As the Leveson Inquiry investigates the relationship between politicians and the media, a video emerges which shows the tensions between Downing Street and the BBC over the latter's coverage of...the Leveson Inquiry.
David Carr / New York Times:
A Doomed Romance With a New Orleans Newspaper — If it keeps on raining, levee's going to break — “When the Levee Breaks,” Led Zeppelin — Newsprint sentimentalists are part of a shrinking club. Plenty of people care about news, but the fetishists who want it to be imprisoned on paper?
Discussion:
Blog of New Orleans, Gambit and Gannett Blog
RELATED:
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
The (not so) daily news
The (not so) daily news
Discussion:
Strange Attractor and JIMROMENESKO.COM
Joe Hagan / New York Magazine:
A New York Times Whodunit — Who slew Times CEO Janet Robinson? Was it Arthur Sulzberger's new lady friend? The advertising market? The frustrated web guru? Or the ambitious Sulzberger cousin?
Discussion:
Capital New York, The Atlantic Wire, Business Insider, Poynter, Gawker, Boston Globe, @moorehn, @romenesko and The New York Observer
RELATED:
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
The real reason for the firing of the New York Times chief executive — The Guardian reported in December that the New York Times's chief executive, Janet Robinson, was to step down. There were no clues as to why she was going. But, if a New York magazine article is to be believed …
John Robinson / Media, disrupted:
Newspaper paywalls: using a Band-Aid on a bullet wound — As more newspapers move to paywalls, it comes clearer to me that publishers are attempting to use a Band-Aid to cover a bullet hole. I share an anecdote: — I asked my class of 20-year-old Elon University students how many were on Facebook.
Discussion:
One Man & His Blog
Craig Silverman / Poynter:
BBC mistakenly uses image of Iraq in Syrian massacre story — A 2003 photo taken in Iraq was mistakenly used by the BBC website to illustrate a report about the recent massacre in Houla, Syria. The Daily Telegraph reports that the image of a child jumping over body bags was removed from the story after the BBC realized its error.
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
NUJ to cut jobs — The National Union of Journalists is to cut jobs and reduce costs in order to stave off an impending financial crisis. The NUJ executive council said it had been forced to take the action to counter issues including a fall in union income, rising costs and a “challenging industrial environment”.
Richard Jones / Guardian:
Local newspapers' crisis: my hyperlocal site was fine, but it didn't pay — I set up Saddleworth News for two main reasons. The first was pure selfishness. I didn't want to leave journalism for ever, and... I also thought my brain would appreciate something to think about every …
Discussion:
Guardian
Thomas Larson / CounterPunch:
Book Critic Censored by San Diego Newspaper — Buy a newspaper and censor its content. This seems to be the policy of San Diego developer and multimillionaire Doug Manchester, who last November purchased the city's largest newspaper and rechristened it, the UT-San Diego.
Discussion:
@romenesko