Top News:
Amelia Hill / Guardian:
Savile questioned by BBC boss 20 years ago — Former BBC Radio 1 controller says he had no reason to disbelieve TV presenter's reply that rumours were ‘nonsense’. Jimmy Savile, who has been accused of child abuse spanning six decades, was questioned by a senior member of staff at the BBC …
Discussion:
Capital New York and New York Times
RELATED:
Guardian:
Jimmy Savile scandal: BBC director general to appear in front of MPs — George Entwistle is expected to answer questions in front of a House of Commons committee next week — The BBC director general is expected to appear to take questions from MPs next week on the Jimmy Savile sex abuse scandal …
Discussion:
Telegraph
Martin Beckford / Telegraph:
Jimmy Savile: Former BBC Trust chairman criticises ‘hysteria’
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Gannett announces rise in circulation revenue, driven by paywalls — Net operating revenues from print circulation were up 5.6 percent in the third quarter of 2012 over the same period the year before, Gannett announced Monday morning. Seventy-one of Gannett's newspapers now have a paywall.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest, mediabistro.com, Wall Street Journal, Gannett Blog, Broadcasting & Cable and Thomson IR
Michael Moynihan / The Daily Beast:
Nicholas Lemann: Journalism Is Doing Just Fine — When Nicholas Lemann announced that he was leaving his post as dean of Columbia Journalism School after 10 years on the job, many of his journalistic colleagues wanted to know the reason—the real reason—for his departure.
Discussion:
@rajunarisetti, @jimmyso and @ksablan
Alexandra Topping / Guardian:
Murdoch: hacking campaigners are ‘scumbags’ — News Corp chief causes outrage on Twitter with caustic dismissal of victims who lobbied David Cameron last week — Rupert Murdoch has labelled victims of phone hacking “scumbag celebrities” after they met David Cameron during the Conservative party conference.
David Carr / New York Times:
TV Debates That Sell More Than Just Drama — In 1960, John F. Kennedy was trailing Richard Nixon as they stepped into the crucible of the first nationally televised debate. While Kennedy soared, Nixon stumbled and never recovered. — Network television played a definitive role, but those were very different times.
Discussion:
Poynter, Prof Chris Daly's Blog, USA Today and Media Decoder
Alexis C. Madrigal / The Atlantic Online:
Dark Social: We Have the Whole History of the Web Wrong — Here's a pocket history of the web, according to many people. In the early days, the web was just pages of information linked to each other. Then along came web crawlers that helped you find what you wanted among all that information.
Discussion:
TechCrunch
Associated Press:
AP names first international social media and UGC editor — The Associated Press has expanded its commitment to social media and user-generated content as global newsgathering resources, promoting Fergus Bell to the newly created position of social media and UGC editor — international.
Nathan / The eBook Reader Blog:
Amazon Quietly Discontinues the Kindle DX — About a week ago I posted about how Amazon had cut the price of the Kindle DX from $379 to $299. As expected it was indeed a final sale to eliminate stock, because the Kindle DX is no longer available for purchase from Amazon; it's only being sold used through third party merchants.
Discussion:
GeekWire, TechCrunch, CNET, SlashGear, WebProNews, Engadget, The Verge and Mashable!
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Circa wants to rethink the way we consume the news on a sub-atomic level — Ben Huh may be the CEO of the humor-oriented Cheezburger Network, a business built on funny cat pictures and other web ephemera, but for more than a year now he has been thinking night and day about the future of the news industry …
Discussion:
AllThingsD, Betabeat, Circa Blog, TechCrunch, @benpopper, The Verge, @craigsilverman, @jeffjarvis, @rafat and PandoDaily
Ryan Kohls / Poynter:
Swedish journalists explain arrest, imprisonment in Ethiopia — For 438 days, two Swedish freelance journalists were locked up in Ethiopian prisons for illegally entering the country and committing acts of terrorism. Prior to their arrest, journalists had been working in the northern part of the country …
Micah L. Sifry / TechPresident:
Who Controls the Presidential Debates? Journalists or the Campaigns? — CNN's Candy Crowley, the moderator of the second presidential debate, which is structured like a “town-hall” meeting, has been saying publicly that she is looking forward to asking follow-ups of the candidates …