Top News:
John Jannarone / Wall Street Journal:
News Corp. Spinoff Has Oz Flavor — In splitting News Corp . into two companies, Rupert Murdoch is creating something he hasn't had in years: an Australian media company. — By some measures, the publishing company to emerge from the division of News Corp. sometime next year will have its roots heavily Down Under.
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Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Murdoch (again) reportedly interested in L.A. Times — News Corp.'s publishing business may “pursue acquisitions of distressed newspapers, such as the Los Angeles Times” after its planned split from the company's media and entertainment divisions, John Jannarone reports.
Discussion:
LA Observed, New York Magazine and NetNewsCheck Latest
Katherine Rushton / Telegraph:
Guardian ‘seriously discussing’ end to print edition — The publisher of the Guardian and Observer newspapers is close to axing the print editions of the newspapers, despite the hopes of its editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger to keep them running for a few more years.
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Robert Andrews / paidContent:
What The Guardian really thinks about newsprint — Depending on whom you choose to believe this month, The Guardian will either cease its print edition, make it free, should start charging online or must lobby for proceeds from an ISP tax. — None of those things is actually happening …
Discussion:
robinsonlloydjames
Emil Protalinski / The Next Web:
comScore: Amazon Kindle Fire users read more newspapers and magazines than Apple iPad users — Between June and August 2012, 37.1 percent of tablet owners read a newspaper on their device at least once a month, while 11.5 percent of tablet owners read them almost daily.
Discussion:
comScore, Inc., iDownloadBlog.com, CNET and ZDNet
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Alistair Barr / Reuters:
Amazon makes big Kindle push in U.S. schools — (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc announced an initiative on Wednesday to get its Kindle e-readers and tablet computers into schools, entering a market that has been particularly successful for rival Apple Inc and its iPad device.
Discussion:
Amazon.com, 9to5Mac, WebProNews and Mercury News
Kara Bloomgarden-Smoke / The New York Observer:
Andrew Goldman Suspended From New York Times — Following last week's Twitter brouhaha, Andrew Goldman will not be writing for the Times Magazine for the next month. — “In light of his recent comments on Twitter, Andrew will not be contributing the Talk column to the Magazine for four weeks, beginning Oct. 28.
Discussion:
Capital New York, The Public Editor's Journal, Poynter, Gawker, @johnjcook, FishbowlNY, @johnjcook, Jezebel and The Huffington Post
Nieman Reports:
Mastering the art of disruptive innovation in journalism — Harvard Business School professor Clayton M. Christensen's theory of disruptive innovation provides a framework to understand how businesses grow, become successful, and falter as nimble start-ups muscle in on their customers.
Discussion:
Recovering Journalist and Digitopoly
Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:
A Jeff Zucker-CNN combination is not as simple as it seems — There are pros and cons to hiring Jeff Zucker to run CNN. — Hardly a day goes by without speculation that former NBCUniversal Chief Executive Jeff Zucker is the leading candidate to succeed Jim Walton as president …
Discussion:
New York Magazine and TVNewser
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Aly Weisman / Business Insider:
Jeff Zucker Likely Leaving ‘Katie’ As He Eyes CNN President Position
Jeff Zucker Likely Leaving ‘Katie’ As He Eyes CNN President Position
Discussion:
TVNewser, Mediaite and Deadline.com
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Study: Women no longer need exceptional qualifications to win Pulitzers, but... Differences in the backgrounds of male and female Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists have lessened, a study finds. University of Missouri professor Yong Volz and Chinese University of Hong Kong professor Francis …
Discussion:
munews.missouri.edu, JIMROMENESKO.COM and Melville House Books
Gary Ng / iPhone in Canada Blog:
Zite Announces ‘CNN Trends’, Its First Major Project With the Company — Zite started off as an iPad app (but later released an iPhone version) and has Canadian roots tied to the University of British Columbia. The app curates articles for you based on what you like to read and ‘learns’ your preferences as time goes along.
Jeff John Roberts / paidContent:
Content newswire NewsCred buys cloud publisher Daylife — NewsCred is a media upstart that offers a one-stop shop for high quality content from the likes of the Economist and Bloomberg. After relaunching less than a year ago with a $4 million investment, the company's technology-driven syndication service …
Discussion:
Business Insider, TechCrunch, The Next Web and AllThingsD