Top News:
Emma Bazilian / Adweek:
After Newsweek, Is Writing on Wall for Newsweeklies? — Newsweek, now facing a digital-only future, isn't the only newsweekly that's struggling in print. Fellow mass-audience title Time is down 19 percent in ad pages in the first half of the year, per Publishers Information Bureau.
Discussion:
Newsweek & The Daily Beast, Capital New York, BuzzFeed and Wall Street Journal
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Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Newsweek's Web-Only Future: Inevitable, and a Whole Lot Smaller — Barry Diller has followed through and pulled the plug on Newsweek's print edition, but he insists that the weekly magazine can survive as a tablet publication. — That doesn't seem like the end game: If they make a go of it …
Discussion:
Talking Biz News and Wall Street Journal
Dylan Byers / Politico:
Turning the page on Tina Brown
Turning the page on Tina Brown
Discussion:
kottke.org, The Huffington Post, NPR, Guardian and msnbc.com
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Google News faces mass newspaper boycott in Brazil — This will sound familiar to anyone who has watched Google News' relations with news publishers over the years.. — The next country in which tension has erupted is one of the world's fastest-growing economies.
Discussion:
JOURNALISM IN THE AMERICAS, WebProNews, Forbes, Search Engine Land and Mashable!
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Amita Sharma / KPBS San Diego:
U-T Owner Manchester Shows Interest In Tribune Company — Hotelier and U-T San Diego owner Doug Manchester wants to buy the Tribune Company, which owns the Los Angeles Times. — Since Manchester bought the U-T more than 10 months ago, he's launched a television channel and purchased The North County Times.
Discussion:
Cision, NetNewsCheck Latest and FishbowlLA
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Robert Channick / Chicago Tribune:
Tribune sets pay wall on some content at $14.99 per month
Tribune sets pay wall on some content at $14.99 per month
Discussion:
Chicago Business and JIMROMENESKO.COM
Jeff John Roberts / paidContent:
Notorious ad hijacker spreads to more media, retail sites — Do publishers have the right to control the ads that appear on their websites? A controversial company doesn't think so and has been injecting billions of unauthorized ads into websites like AOL, the BBC and the New York Times.
Katherine Mangan / Wired Campus:
Minnesota Gives Coursera the Boot, Citing a Decades-Old Law — Coursera offers free, online courses to people around the world, but if you live in Minnesota, company officials are urging you to log off or head for the border. — The state's Office of Higher Education has informed …
Discussion:
Forbes, Slate, The Blotter, GigaOM, TechCrunch, Hit & Run, Popehat, WebProNews, The Consumerist, Techdirt, Inside Higher Ed and The Volokh Conspiracy
Jim Romenesko:
Report: Publisher and circulation boss at Advance's Express-Times suddenly resign — A tipster writes: “The publisher AND circulation director at The Express-Times in Easton, Pa. (an Advance paper) have suddenly resigned, but no reason has been given.” — I got editor Jim Deegan's voicemail, then called managing editor Nick Falsone.
Discussion:
lehighvalleylive.com
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
The Telegraph's much-delayed digital paywall appears to have taken another step back, following the departure of the senior executive responsible for the strategy. Steve McLaughlin, Telegraph Media Group's chief commercial officer, held responsibility for digital strategy and revenues …
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest
William Launde / Wall Street Journal:
CBS's Les Moonves Says TV Channel Shakeout Could Remedy Squeeze — CBS Corp. CBS -0.12% Chief Executive Les Moonves has an answer for cable and satellite operators who complain their profits are getting squeezed by continually rising content costs: eliminate low-rated channels from their lineup.
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Tim Davie to head BBC Worldwide — Appointment of new chief executive marks end of John Smith's 23-year career with corporation — Tim Davie, the head of BBC's director of audio and music, has been appointed as the new chief executive of BBC Worldwide. — The appointment of Davie …
Discussion:
Radio Today with RCS, Digital Spy and Media Week
The Huffington Post:
Fox News Chief Signs Big New Contract — Fox News CEO Roger Ailes has signed a new four-year contract to remain the head of the network, the Daily Beast's Howard Kurtz tweeted on Friday. Ailes will run Fox Business Network, Fox television stations and 20th Century TV as well.
Discussion:
Media Decoder and New York Magazine
Rob Williams / The Independent:
Police begin formal investigation into Jimmy Savile sex abuse allegations after identifying more than 200 potential victims — Police have begun a formal criminal investigation into alleged child abuse by Jimmy Saville, which now includes other living people, Scotland Yard said today.
Jim Brunner / Seattle Times:
Seattle Times news staffers protest company's political-ad campaign — More than 100 Seattle Times news staffers - including reporters, photographers, columnists, artists, editors and online news producers - signed a letter Thursday protesting the Times Co's decision to sponsor newspaper ads …
Discussion:
Poynter, Media Decoder, The Seattle Times, Guardian, Slog and The New Yorker Blog
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