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11:20 PM ET, June 7, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Adam Martin / The Atlantic Wire:
Chuck Klosterman Is The New York Times Magazine's New Ethicist  —  Update (2:04 p.m. EDT): Klosterman, a music and culture critic best known for his Esquire column Chuck Klosterman's America and the book Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs, confirmed via email that he starts his new gig this weekend.
RELATED:
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:   New York Times' new Ethicist Chuck Klosterman: 'I always prefer discussing other people's problems'
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
Dean Baquet Defends New York Times Amid Leak Controversy: 'We Can't Edit A Paper For Our Critics'  —  NEW YORK — Dean Baquet, managing editor of The New York Times, defended his paper's national security coverage after members of Congress called for an investigation into the leaking …
Discussion: Guardian, FishbowlNY, Politico and Politico
RELATED:
The Huffington Post:
Dianne Feinstein, Saxby Chambliss Promise To Crack Down On National Security Leaks
Discussion: New York Times
Dylan Byers / Politico:
The New York Times: Barack Obama's not leaking to us
Discussion: Hit & Run
Jack Mirkinson / The Huffington Post:
New York Times Leak Controversy Escalates
Discussion: C-SPAN
Josh Stearns / CJR:
New Orleans and the future of news  —  Media policy matters, and journalists ought to weigh in  —  Last week's announcement that the New Orleans Times-Picayune would be slashing its staff and cutting its print run to just three days a week has sparked a new round of debates about the future of news.
RELATED:
Harry Shearer / CJR:
The Sometimes Picayune  —  Want to damage New Orleans (again)?  Decimate its newspaper  —  Here, for your reading pleasure, are two familiar cliches: 1.  New Orleans is a unique city.  2. The newspaper business is changing.  Several days ago, when it was announced that The Times-Picayune …
Discussion: Fortune
Julie Moos / Poynter:
'I'm not going to read the paper online': New Orleans photographer documents locals reading the Times-Picayune
Amy Chozick / Media Decoder:
Columbia Accepts Assad Aide Who Was Helped by Barbara Walters  —  The young aide to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria who received an endorsement from the longtime television correspondent Barbara Walters was accepted into a prestigious graduate program at Columbia University, the school said on Thursday.
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
One year in, Bloomberg View still ‘fairly fluid’  —  David Shipley's been Bloomberg View's top editor since last September, when Jamie Rubin left the organization after reportedly clashing with colleagues.  The opinion site, launched on May 25, 2011, earned its first Pulitzer Prize nominations this spring …
Leonard Downie Jr / Washington Post:
Forty years after Watergate, investigative journalism is at risk  —  Investigative reporting in America did not begin with Watergate.  But it became entrenched in American journalism — and has been steadily spreading around the world — largely because of Watergate.
Daniel Frankel / paidContent:
Why HBO is once again TV's most relevant network  —  It was just one more small step for TV Everywhere.  HBO Go will now be available on yet another tablet, the Kindle Fire, through eight out of the top 10 pay TV services in the U.S.  —  And it was just one more incremental move for HBO …
Discussion: GigaOM, The Corsair and Media Decoder
Economist:
Reporters without orders  —  Can journalism funded by private generosity compensate for the decline of the commercial kind?  —  from the print edition  —  BANDITS, terrorists, clan rivalries, lawless security forces and corrupt officials make Russia's north Caucasus the murkiest part of an often opaque country.
Discussion: @jayrosen_nyu
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Don't just liquidate your newspapers — reinvent them  —  As newspaper owners like Newhouse-owned Advance Publications try to stem the cash flowing out of their businesses by shutting down the presses, there are a number of ways to look at their decision.  On the one hand, it can be seen …
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
Emma Bazilian / Adweek:
‘Entertainment Weekly’ Cuts Staff  —  Time Inc.'s Entertainment Weekly has cut three editorial staffers in recent weeks, Adweek has learned.  A spokeswoman said three junior-level positions were eliminated over the past six weeks and their responsibilities absorbed by existing editorial staffers.
Bloomberg:
As Tribune Nears Exit From Three-Year Bankruptcy, Big Papers Could Sell  —  Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune Most Likely to Attract ‘Vanity Buyers’  —  Tribune Co. begins its last big court fight today, one of two steps remaining before the publisher exits bankruptcy into a newspaper market where values have dropped by half.
Discussion: Guardian and Los Angeles Times
Andrew Phelps / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Slate doubles down on podcasts, courting niche audiences and happy advertisers  —  The New York Times started making podcasts way back in 2004, when the form was barely more than a concept and the term itself was new.  In December 2011, the Times dropped nearly all of them, saying …
 
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 More News: 
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
The ‘Times’ shuffles the deck, again, on the education beat
Jim Romenesko:
Winners of Livingston Awards announced
Jim Romenesko:
Berkeley panel recommends new j-school dean
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Labatt won't sue newspaper for running photo of alleged cannibal holding its beer
 Earlier Picks: 
David Meyer / GigaOM:
E-book upstart Txtr signs majors for U.S. push
Reuters:
News Corp buys Disney stake in Asian sports JV
Discussion: Wall Street Journal and The Wrap