Top News:
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
Foxy Nate Silver and why old-media hedgehogs could soon be old news — Nate Silver - statistician, analyst, blogger, author, and Xanax for liberals - is a one-man startup, and his brand is on the line. Aside from the candidates themselves, perhaps no man stands to lose more from this election.
Discussion:
Salon, JIMROMENESKO.COM, FAIR Blog, CJR, The Atlantic Online, The Week, Gawker.com, HBR.org and The Public Editor's Journal
RELATED:
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
The Times's Washington Bureau Chief, and Legions of Others, in Defense of Nate Silver — Nate Silver, author of the FiveThirtyEight blog on NYTimes.com, may be under attack from some people, as I noted in a post on Thursday but he also has many defenders. — Hundreds of them wrote to me in e-mails …
Discussion:
Groundswell, Erik Wemple and CJR
Josh Marshall / Talking Points Memo:
Sorry, Margaret, You Need to Get Out More
Sorry, Margaret, You Need to Get Out More
Discussion:
Poynter, @felixsalmon, Quote and Comment, Deadspin.com Updates, The Awl, Brad DeLong, The Daily Dish and @moorehn
Pew Research Center:
Journalist Alan Murray Named President of Pew Research Center — Washington (Nov. 2) — Veteran journalist Alan Murray, currently deputy managing editor and executive editor, online, for The Wall Street Journal, has been named President of the Pew Research Center, succeeding public opinion expert Andrew Kohut …
Discussion:
Reuters, JIMROMENESKO.COM, FishbowlNY, Politico, Poynter and www.wnyc.org
RELATED:
Capital New York:
Who will be the next editor of ‘The Wall Street Journal’? Not Alan Murray — Alan Murray. Screencap via vimeo. — Alan Murray, deputy managing editor and online executive editor of The Wall Street Journal, is leaving the paper. — He announced the move on Twitter just as his new employer …
Steven Mufson / Washington Post:
The Washington Post Co. reports higher earnings — The Washington Post Co. reported sharply higher earnings in the third quarter of this year, bolstered by cable television profits, political and summer Olympic Game advertising on its local television broadcast stations, and a one-time accounting benefit.
Discussion:
Broadcasting & Cable, AdAge and Politico
RELATED:
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
TV earnings up, print earnings down at Washington Post — Third quarter revenue at the Washington Post Company overall was flat compared to the same period last year, as broadcast television and cable businesses rose, but circulation and ad revenue fell at its newspapers.
Drew Olanoff / TechCrunch:
Twitter Releases Numbers Related To Hurricane Sandy: More Than 20M Tweets Sent During Its Peak — As you know, the devastation of Hurricane Sandy has hit millions. Many turned to Twitter to discuss what they were going through. Today, the company shared some interesting facts and numbers having …
Discussion:
The Next Web, Forbes, Home Media Magazine and CNET
RELATED:
Anna Codrea-Rado / CJR:
It's about the info, not the outlet
It's about the info, not the outlet
Discussion:
The Next Web, Betabeat and Softpedia News
Style Ledger:
Chris Anderson to Leave Wired — It was announced today that Chris Anderson, editor in chief of Wired magazine, will be leaving to become CEO of 3D Robotics, a company he cofounded several years ago. From a Conde Nast statement: “Chris joined Wired as editor in chief in 2001.
Discussion:
WWD, New York Magazine, The Wrap, Media Decoder, paidContent, TechCrunch, AllThingsD, SmartPlanet, @jwherrman, @evgenymorozov, @mims and The New York Observer
RELATED:
Emma Bazilian / Adweek:
The Search Is On for Wired's Next Editor
Ken Yeung / The Next Web:
Wired editor Ryan Singel leaves to create Contextly, help publishers integrate ‘related links’
Wired editor Ryan Singel leaves to create Contextly, help publishers integrate ‘related links’
Discussion:
Boing Boing, Wired and Context
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Pew: ‘MSNBC was more negative in its treatment of Romney than Fox was of Obama’ — Between the last week of August and the third week of October, 38 percent of campaign coverage studied by Pew's Project for Excellence in Journalism was “what is typically called horserace coverage …
Discussion:
Forbes, CNN, Journalism.org, Mashable! and The Verge
RELATED:
Mark Walsh / MediaPost:
Social Media Harsh On Presidential Candidates
Social Media Harsh On Presidential Candidates
Discussion:
Forbes, Journalism.org and CNET
Anthony Crupi / Adweek:
Storm may have cost media industry half a billion dollars — Already looking rocky at the start of the fourth quarter, the media economy this week was dealt a staggering blow by Hurricane Sandy. — In disrupting local TV and radio broadcasts and putting a halt to all New York media buying …
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest
Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
BitTorrent Pirate Ordered to Pay $1.5 Million Damages For Sharing 10 Movies — Since early 2010, hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. have been sued for downloading and sharing copyrighted content on BitTorrent. — Nearly all of these cases end up dismissed or settled …
Discussion:
Forbes, Pocket-lint, Techdirt, CNET and Softpedia News
Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
Why Time Magazine Used Instagram To Cover Hurricane Sandy — If there was still any debate about whether serious photojournalism can take place in the context of camera phones and cutesy retro filters, it's over now. — To document the effects of Hurricane Sandy on the northeast …
Discussion:
The Next Web, The Verge, FishbowlNY and Poynter
Emma Bazilian / Adweek:
Quartz Exceeds First-Month Expectations — Atlantic Media Company launched the business news site Quartz in late September, aimed at the world's financial elite with a mobile-first approach. The content designed in an app-like setting ideally performs well enough on smartphone and tablet platforms …
Discussion:
Folio
Michael Learmonth / AdAge:
Sandy Brings Back Prime Time for Original Wireless Network: Radio — Amid Continuing Blackout, Medium Is the Only Game in Town — Batteries are drained, internet connections long-gone. For the nearly 5 million households muddling through a fourth day without power in the wake of Hurricane Sandy …
Discussion:
Capital New York
Julie Moos / Poynter:
New York Times to restore paywall after 5 days of free access — The New York Times will restore its paywall later today, after providing five days of free access as a public service during Hurricane Sandy. — A note on the Times' website reads: … Once the paywall is restored, non-subscribers can read only 10 articles.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
Alex Ben Block / Hollywood Reporter:
George Lucas Will Use Disney $4 Billion to Fund Education — Spokesperson for Lucasfilm tells THR the majority of the sale price will go toward educational philanthropy. — By the end of the year, the $4.05 billion sale of Lucasfilm to Disney should be finalized.
Discussion:
Top Digital Journal News, Forbes, /Film, Geekologie, Vanity Fair, Mashable!, Digital Spy and Softpedia News
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
LongTail Raises $5 Million to Take on Web Video Heavyweights — Remember the Web video boom? Most of the venture capital buzz is now directed at mobile ads, a small market that's supposed to grow like a weed. Meanwhile, video is dominated by Google/YouTube, with everyone else way, way, way behind.
Discussion:
Beet.TV
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
News Outlets Held Back Detail Of Benghazi Attack At CIA's Request — NEW YORK — U.S. intelligence officials, speaking on a not-for-attribution basis, provided reporters Thursday with the most detailed explanation yet of the CIA's presence in Benghazi, Libya, and the agency's response to the Sept. 11 …
Discussion:
Washington Post
Associated Press:
News media play big role in figuring out election winners long before vote count ends — Amy E. Conn, File/Associated Press - FILE - This Nov. 19, 2000 file photo shows counters and observers continuing a hand recount of Broward County ballots at the Broward Emergency Operation Center in Plantation …
Betabeat:
Less Looting, More Trolling: Daily Mail, Drudge Get Pwnd By Twitter Pranksters #SandyLootCrew — Original image (left), fake tweet from #SandyLootCrew (right) (Photo: Sydney Morning Herald) — The media hasn't been as roughed up by Sandy as, say, the transportation industry.
Discussion:
Capital New York and The Daily Beast