Top News:
Megan Garber / The Atlantic Online:
Why the World's Most Perfect News Tweet Is Kind of Boring — Researchers have found a way to predict a tweet's popularity — with an astounding 84 percent accuracy. — Here, per one algorithm, is the Platonic version of the news tweet: … If that seems a little dull for Twitter Perfection ... well, that's the point.
Discussion:
h30507.www3.hp.com, Mashable, PC Magazine, Neatorama and Personanondata
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Steve Myers / Poynter:
Biggest news sources on Google News aren't shared the most on Twitter — Researchers who tried to figure out what factors influence a news story's popularity on Twitter found that the news sources which are shared the most aren't the ones featured most prominently on Google News.
Dan Barry / New York Times:
All the News That's Fit to Screen: Movies About Journalism — BACK when paper and ink still mattered, I fell into a job as a nightside reporter at The Providence Journal, in the habitually newsworthy state of Rhode Island. This was many years ago, before exercise, sobriety and good hygiene …
Discussion:
Prof Chris Daly's Blog
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Looking for the Apple TV? Look in Front of You. — Nope, still no Apple TV. — Apple's WWDC presentation took nearly two hours, and none of that time was devoted to the product lots of smart people insist is going to show up one day, someday. — Still, look a little closer …
Discussion:
Forbes
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Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Here's why Apple didn't open up Apple TV — There were plenty of rumors ahead of today's WWDC keynote that Apple would announce some kind of update to its Apple TV platform. And while pundits have long been speculating about the launch of a full-blown TV set, the latest round of rumors …
Discussion:
Forbes, BGR and Shiny Objects
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Why is the U.S. State Department paying Amazon $16.5 million for Kindles? — Update, 10:32 PM: NextGov has backtracked on its original post to say that the State Department is “considering” this program and that it “could include as many as 35,000 Kindle e-Readers” over a 5-year, $16.5 million contract.
Discussion:
Nextgov, CNET, VentureBeat, TeleRead, GeekWire and Washington Free Beacon
Jack Shafer:
What happens to Tribune after bankruptcy? — Choking softly on the wad of debt “rescuer” Sam Zell fed it, Tribune Co checked into a Wilmington, Delaware, bankruptcy court at the end of 2008. Now newly slimmed, especially after the payment of $410 million in legal and other professional fees …
Discussion:
LA Observed
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Orange County Register sold to Aaron Kushner group — The Orange County Register has been sold to 2100 Trust LLC. The newspaper had been owned by Freedom Communications, which announced the sale of its newspapers in Texas and in the Midwest last month and of its newspapers in North Carolina and in Florida on June 1.
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, MediaPost, Media Decoder, JIMROMENESKO.COM and Free Press
Andrew Phelps / Nieman Journalism Lab:
What makes something go viral? The Internet according to Gawker's Neetzan Zimmerman — In March, I wrote about Gawker's new quantity-over-quality experiment. Each day, one Gawker staffer was tasked with pageview-chasing duty, a quest to post enough cat videos, Miley Cyrus pics …
Discussion:
Gawker
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Joy Behar Is Reviving Her Talk Show, This Time for Current TV — The comedian and political commentator Joy Behar, whose HLN talk show was canceled late last year, is reprising her act for Current TV, the network announced on Monday. — Ms. Behar's hourlong talk show …
Discussion:
Radio & Television …, Politico, The Wrap and Adweek
The Huffington Post:
AP Scores Court Victory — BOISE, Idaho — A federal appeals court ruled Friday that witnesses should have full viewing access to Idaho's upcoming execution, siding with The Associated Press and 16 other news organizations. — The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued the decision …
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
A Sports Aggregator Finds a Home: Gannett Buys Quickish — The folks at Gannett, the newspaper publisher best known as the people who bring you USA Today, also want to be known for online sports. Here's another move in that direction: The company's USA Today Sports Media Group has acquired Quickish …
Discussion:
USA Today, Nieman Journalism Lab, Adweek, Nodes - Quickish and Gannett Blog