Top News:
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
W's Nina Lawrence Leaves Condé Nast for WSJ — W's Nina Lawrence has split after 15 years at Condé Nast for The Wall Street Journal, where she's landed a big job: vp of global marketing, advertising sales. Lawrence will be in charge of overseeing the global ad sales team across print …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and WWD
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Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Condé budget cuts of 5% on 2013 agenda — Condé Nast, home to The New Yorker, Vogue and Vanity Fair, is poring over preliminary budgets for next year — and it doesn't look pretty. — While not every mag is finished going over the books with President Bob Sauerberg …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and mediabistro.com
WSJ Blogs - WSJ:
Time Warner's Jeff Bewkes Has An Unlikely Lunch Partner: Roger Ailes — Here's a piece of breaking news that will give some people at CNN nightmares: earlier this year their ultimate boss Time Warner Chairman Jeff Bewkes, had lunch with Fox News Chief Roger Ailes. Just imagine what those two discussed.
Sruthi Ramakrishnan / Reuters:
Gannett to stop broadcasting on Dish if ad-skipping feature not removed — (Reuters) - Dish Network Corp said the broadcasting arm of newspaper publisher Gannett Co Inc has threatened to withdraw broadcasting on the satellite TV provider if it does not block the commercial-skipping feature …
Discussion:
Tampa Bay Times and TVSpy
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Cable Channel to Televise Bin Laden Film Before Election — The National Geographic Channel plans to televise a feature film about the killing of Osama bin Laden on Nov. 4, two days before the presidential election. — The film, titled “Seal Team Six: The Raid on Osama Bin Laden,” …
Discussion:
Cable Television News, The Atlantic Wire, Media Law Prof Blog and Pressing Issues
Alex Sherman / Bloomberg:
Blockbuster Hits Rewind on Plan to Return as Netflix Killer — Billionaire Charlie Ergen is giving up on his plan to turn the once-mighty Blockbuster LLC video- store chain into a Netflix (NFLX) Inc. competitor and gadget retailer. — When Ergen's Dish Network Corp. (DISH) …
Discussion:
Radio & Television …, Bloomberg, AdAge, Los Angeles Times, Engadget and The Verge
Jack Mirkinson / The Huffington Post:
Jim Lehrer On Debate Moderating: My Job Was To ‘Stay Out Of The Way’ — Jim Lehrer responded on Thursday to the furor surrounding his debate moderating performance. Though it was his 12th time in the role, Lehrer received some of his worst press, with critics saying that he had let both Barack Obama …
Discussion:
Poynter, Politico, TMZ.com, Chickaboomer and New York Times
Sarah Ellison / Vanity Fair:
Blood, Sweat, and Piers — Piers Morgan, testifying before the Leveson Inquiry in London late last year, had just withstood two hours of uncomfortable questioning about phone hacking—a practice the 46-year-old tabloid editor-cum-TV star described in the first of his three memoirs as the …
Discussion:
TVNewser
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
‘Post’ editors called to Garrison country club for day-long digital teach-in — In the war between New York City's two daily tabloids—the New York Post and the Daily News—there's one battle that's been a rout: the battle for the web. — Maybe that's why a group of editors from the Post …
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest and NY Daily News
Greg Sandoval / CNET:
Is Spotify's business model broken? — Financial numbers for privately held Spotify have allegedly surfaced and if accurate, the music service is in a world of hurt. — Spotify CEO Daniel Ek — PrivCo., a company that sells data on non-publicly traded companies says it has obtained …
Victoria Cavaliere / NY Daily News:
Family of missing journalist Austin Tice make plea to Syrian government through Arabic-language TV — “Knowing Austin is alive is comforting to our family, although it is difficult to see him in the circumstances recently depicted,” his family said in a statement released to Russia Today's Arabic service.
Todd Shields / Bloomberg:
Cable Companies Freed From Sharing Their Non-Sports Programs — Cable providers such as Time Warner Cable Inc. (TWC) may withhold their non-sports programming from competitors, U.S. regulators said today in a rule change opposed by satellite broadcasters. — The Federal Communications Commission …
Discussion:
Wall St. Cheat Sheet