Top News:
John Paton / Digital First:
Another Tough Step — Folks, Today Digital First Media announced Journal Register Company has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will seek to implement a prompt sale. We expect the auction and sale process to take about 90 days, and I am pleased to tell you the Company has a signed stalking horse bid …
Discussion:
Poynter, Associated Press, Deadline.com, @michaelghiggins, @dankennedy_nu, @psmith, @p2chairman, @obrien, @a_sundays_drive, @alisongow, @jamesddetroit, @mymessyjesse, @jxpaton, @johngapper, @ryanchittum, @neilthackray, @johngapper, @janinegibson, @jerrod_thehour, @rafat and The Newspaper Guild
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Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Journal Register Co. declares bankruptcy...again: Is this the industry's first real reboot? — It was just three years ago that the Journal Register Co. filed for bankruptcy, its collection of small local newspapers hit hard by the economic crisis and the secular decline of the newspaper industry.
Discussion:
Journal Register Company
Steve Buttry / The Buttry Diary:
Financial maneuvers won't slow Digital First progress — I don't pretend to understand corporate finance. So I won't have a lot to say about today's announcement that Journal Register Company filed for Chapter 11 and is for sale. — Here's what I know: JRC is making great strides …
Jim Romenesko:
Journal Register files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy — Digital First Media CEO John Paton writes on his blog: Journal Register Company has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will seek to implement a prompt sale. We expect the auction and sale process to take about 90 days …
Glenn Greenwald / Guardian:
Why didn't CNN's international arm air its own documentary on Bahrain's Arab Spring repression? — In late March 2011, as the Arab Spring was spreading, CNN sent a four-person crew to Bahrain to produce a one-hour documentary on the use of internet technologies and social media by democracy activists in the region.
Discussion:
@nickkristof, GULF DAILY NEWS, @jayrosen_nyu, @twdonovan, @monaeltahawy, @drew3ooo, @amelscript, @acarvin and @alaashehabi
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Glenn Greenwald / Guardian:
CNN and the business of state-sponsored TV news
CNN and the business of state-sponsored TV news
Discussion:
@jeremyscahill
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
News Corp bonuses cut following phone-hacking scandal — Four of News Corporation's top executives have had their bonuses cut due to the adverse impact of the News of the World phone-hacking scandal, although chairman and chief executive Rupert Murdoch still pocketed more than $30m (£18.9m) for the year to the end of June.
Discussion:
Media & Entertainment, @dansabbagh and Wall Street Journal
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Bloomberg:
News Corp. Selects Board Member With Ties To Colombia Wiretaps — News Corp. (NWS), still seeking to move past a hacking scandal at its U.K. newspapers, has nominated to its board a former Colombian president whose administration was itself embroiled in an illegal wiretapping controversy.
Clay Shirky:
Save Homicide Watch — Homicide Watch, one of the most important experiments in improving journalism in the era of the internet, will die in a week, unless we save them. They need our help. Please donate $50 on Kickstarter to help them keep working. If you can't do $50, do $25, or $5.
Discussion:
10,000 Words, @anjalimullany, @justinnxt and Hillman Foundation blogs
Gabriel Sherman / New York Magazine:
Not Their Party: Fox News Eschews Convention Celebrations — Isn't winning a reason to celebrate? Not for Fox News. At last week's Republican National Convention, Fox crushed its television news rivals with some 9.1 million viewers when Clint Eastwood and his empty chair took the stage …
Discussion:
Capital New York, TVNewser, Poynter and Associated Press
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Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
A media lovefest in Charlotte
A media lovefest in Charlotte
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Mediaite and New York Times
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Tuesday Q&A: Bill Marimow on his new old job, and the future of the Philadelphia Inquirer — Here's an understatement: It's been a wild ride at Philadelphia's daily newspapers. In April, The Philadelphia Inquirer and the Daily News were sold, after ratcheting concern over the political influence of the buyers.
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Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Public cost of Leveson inquiry at £3.9m — Lord Justice Leveson's inquiry into press standards cost £3.9m of public money in the 11 months to 30 June. The four lawyers acting as counsel to the inquiry have taken home just over £1m. The highest-paid of these will have been lead counsel Robert Jay QC.
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Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
Knight Foundation funds 20 projects for community reporting, data and collaboration — The Knight Foundation announced $3.67 million in matching funds today that will support 20 local news and information projects. — The Knight Community Information Challenge aims to boost home-grown news efforts …
Kevin Gosztola / Firedoglake:
Undercover Agent or Cop Threatens to Assault Journalist, Grabs Other Journalist with Credentials at DNC — Charlotte, NC — Two journalists covering the Democratic National Convention were confronted on Sunday by two undercover agents who assaulted one and threatened to punch the other in the mouth for photographing them.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Pixiq and Pressing Issues