Top News:
Julie Moos / Poynter:
Warren Buffett responds to Times-Picayune pleas for help — New Orleans musician Evan Christopher wrote an open letter to Warren Buffett last week, and the billionaire newspaper owner has responded: … Optimists will note that Buffett did not say he wouldn't buy the paper.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM, The Atlantic Wire, @justinnxt, NolaVie and Blog of New Orleans, Gambit
RELATED:
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Times-Picayune staff memo to editors: ‘Will there be quotas for online entries?’ + 60 more questions — New Orleans Times-Picayune staffers are expected to start hearing next week how their jobs will change — if they have jobs — once the newspaper shifts to printing only three days a week with an emphasis on digital publishing.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM
Paul Sonne / Wall Street Journal:
News Corp. Could Face 500 Phone-Hacking Claims — LONDON—Lawyers for both News Corp. and phone-hacking victims on Friday estimated in court that the media company will ultimately face about 500 civil claims related to illegal voice-mail interception by the now-closed News of the World tabloid.
Discussion:
Guardian and The Huffington Post
Gabriel Sherman / New York Magazine:
Roger Ailes, Upstate Press Baron, Is in a Newspaper War — Roger Ailes, in his day job, rules the Fox News media empire that has been the dominant force in cable news ever since he took on CNN's entrenched monopoly in the mid-nineties. But now Roger Ailes, community newspaper baron …
Discussion:
The Awl, FishbowlNY and The Huffington Post
RELATED:
Jon Lafayette / Broadcasting & Cable:
Turner's Kent ‘Very Unhappy’ With Ratings Dive at CNN — Backs Cooper, Morgan, Burnett, but other shows may be replaced — Turner Broadcasting CEO Phil Kent admitted to being “very unhappy” with CNN's primetime ratings, but said it won't resort to tricks to increase viewership.
Discussion:
B&C, Mediaite, TVNewser, Inside Cable News and The Huffington Post
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Wall Street Journal “cannot generate enough video streams” to meet advertising demand — The Wall Street Journal announced this morning the launch of a new early-morning show, Asia Today, which will broadcast weekdays at 6:30 a.m. (Eastern), with a focus on business, finance, and breaking news in the region.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest
Daniel Bentley / Journalism.co.uk:
CoveritLive switches to paid-only service — Popular liveblogging platform CoverItLive has announced the end of its free usage tier, becoming an entirely paid for subscription service. — In an email to current subscribers the company wrote: … CoveritLive's ‘Starter’ subscription costs $9.99 per month …
Discussion:
Examiner and 10,000 Words
Sarah Wachter / Poynter:
Google News Founder: To invent the future, news industry must hire ‘restless agents of change’ — Media companies of the future must operate using a different business model that addresses the endless waves of disruptive new technology and staggering competition, said Krishna Bharat …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
Clay Shirky / CJR:
WaPo must transform to survive — Clay Shirky disputes The Audit's take on the Washington Post's financial future — Ryan Chittum's “The Washington Post Co.'s Self-Destructive Course” is a blistering attack on the paper's management of its journalistic mission and its economic viability.
Discussion:
Garcia Media
RELATED:
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
New York Times, Washington Post Defend Against Politico's Media Bias Claims
New York Times, Washington Post Defend Against Politico's Media Bias Claims
Discussion:
Capital New York, The Week, @mlcalderone, Erik Wemple, Slate, Gawker, The Atlantic Online, Weekly Standard, Poynter, NewsBusters.org blogs and Politico
Oliver Burkeman / Guardian:
Perhaps I'm biased, but can we please stop talking about ‘media bias’?
Perhaps I'm biased, but can we please stop talking about ‘media bias’?
Discussion:
Erik Wemple, FishbowlNY, Mediaite, @antderosa and @jayrosen_nyu
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Kickstarting a Soccer Magazine: An Old Medium Finds A New Way Of Funding — To launch a print magazine in 2012, you almost by definition have to be something of a nostalgist. But when it came time for George Quraishi and Mark Kirby to raise money for Howler, their new magazine for American soccer fans …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals
Katy Bachman / Adweek:
Microsoft's Do Not Track Browser Angers Online Ad Industry — Microsoft's new Do Not Track default browser may win the company points with Washington, but it pissed off the online ad industry. — Buried in yesterday's release of Windows 8 was a revelation that took the industry by surprise …
Discussion:
Betabeat, VentureBeat, TechNet Blogs, Softpedia News, Wired, CNET, Broadcasting & Cable, Hillicon Valley, CNNMoney.com, Engadget, ZDNet, AdPulp and Digits
Jack Shafer:
Drug panics, bath salts, and face-eating zombies — Last Saturday afternoon, a naked man gnawed off most of the face of a half-naked man on a Miami causeway. He continued chewing even after police shot him and did not stop until they shot him dead. — Things like that don't happen everyday …
Discussion:
Boing Boing, Erik Wemple, The Week and Guardian
Jon Brodkin / Ars Technica:
Nook version of War and Peace turns the word “kindled” into “Nookd” — Tolstoy's text victimized by modern technology, laziness. — In one of the truly bizarre incidents we've seen out of the e-book publishing world, a translation of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace for Barnes & Noble's Nook platform …
Discussion:
The Future of the Internet, Fast Company and @mathewi