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3:10 PM ET, October 18, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Tina Brown / The Daily Beast:
A Turn of the Page for Newsweek  —  After 80 years in print, the newsmagazine adopts an all-digital format.  —  We are announcing this morning an important development at Newsweek and The Daily Beast.  Newsweek will transition to an all-digital format in early 2013.
RELATED:
David Carr / Media Decoder:
Newsweek to Cease Print Publication at End of Year  —  Newsweek, the weekly magazine that for decades summarized the news for households across the United States but struggled to maintain relevance in the Internet era, announced on Thursday that it would cease print publication at the end of the year.
Kevin Lincoln / BuzzFeed:
Don't Blame Tina Brown  —  The demise of Newsweek's defining print magazine means the end of Tina Brown's desperate attempt to save the cover — not just of a print magazine, but really of anything at all — as a meaningful cultural force.  Brown was the master of the form.
Discussion: The Huffington Post
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Amid ‘Newsweek’ funerary rites, two high-profile departures: Peter Boyer, Rebecca Dana  —  As news sinks in that Newsweek will soon cease to exist (as a printed object, at any rate, which in the U.S. is roughly the same thing), word is starting to leak out about high-profile personnel …
Andrew Sullivan / The Daily Dish:
Out Of The Ashes Of Dead Trees  —  The shift in my own mind has happened gradually.  Even up to a year ago, I was still getting my New York Times every morning on paper, wrapped in blue plastic.  Piles of them would sit in my blog-cave, read and half-read, skimmed, and noted.
Felix Salmon:
Why keep Newsweek on life support?  —  It's hard to make money in journalism, and even harder to make money in print journalism.  But here's what I don't understand: invariably, every time a print publication fails, it announces that it's not going to die, it's just going to “transition to an all-digital format”.
Joseph B. White / Wall Street Journal:
Tina Brown: Time to “Embrace Our Future.”  —  The WSJ's Keach Hagey is back from an interview with Newsweek Daily Beast Editor-in-Chief Tina Brown and company CEO Baba Shetty, and has more on the decision to end Newsweek's print edition:  —  From Ms. Brown:
Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg / Wall Street Journal:
Amazon Struggles to Crack Publishing  —  Amazon.com Inc. has had lots of success in book retailing.  But cracking the publishing business hasn't been as easy.  —  Take one of Amazon's biggest titles for fall, actress and director Penny Marshall's memoir “My Mother Was Nuts.”
RELATED:
Emil Protalinski / The Next Web:
comScore: Amazon Kindle Fire users read more newspapers and magazines than Apple iPad users
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.
Discussion: CNET and Reuters
RELATED:
Alexander C. Kaufman / The Wrap:
Ted Turner: ‘CNN Fluffing Up News Coverage’  —  Ted Turner, the founder of CNN, said Thursday that he'd like to see “less fluff” on his cable news channel.  —  Turner told Charlie Rose on “CBS This Morning” that CNN, which enhanced its reputation with its coverage of the Persian Gulf War in 1990 …
RELATED:
Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:
A Jeff Zucker-CNN combination is not as simple as it seems
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
AOL's Patch ‘in line to make a profit’  —  AOL has said its US local news service, Patch, is on schedule to turn its first profit within the next 12 months, facing down critics who questioned its investment in the network.  Tim Armstrong, the AOL chief executive, told the Dublin Web Summit …
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
Blogger turns to tips, briefly becomes “best-paid” journalist in his country  —  Last week, a friend of mine from Wellington, New Zealand, walked into what Americans would call a social security office, strolled up to a self-service kiosk, opened Microsoft Office, and accessed an enormous trove of private government data.
 
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