Top News:
Tim Molloy / The Wrap:
GetGlue Acquired by Viggle for $25M, Stock — Viggle Inc. has purchased GetGlue for $25 million in cash and 48.3 million shares in stock, with the goal of making the merged companies the dominate force in social TV. Together, the two companies will have more than 4 million users.
Discussion:
Forbes, Lost Remote, Business Wire, AdAge, CNET, TechCrunch, GigaOM, Multichannel.com, VentureBeat, App Advice, mediabistro.com, Hollywood Reporter and Mashable!
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Jeff John Roberts / GigaOM:
Twitter is safer in America: lessons from two sex scandals — Two recent incidents raise questions about how the law should respond when social media wrongly labels someone a paedophile. The incidents, which took place on different sides of the Atlantic, also showed why free speech laws are better in America.
Discussion:
New York Post and Telegraph
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Michael Kinsley / New York Magazine:
In Conversation: Tina Brown — Days after the election and a month before she'll retire the print edition of Newsweek, the pioneering editor talks with Michael Kinsley about the future for newsweeklies, American Anglophilia, and personally presiding over the end of the twentieth century.
Discussion:
mediabistro.com, Capital New York, The Wrap, FishbowlNY and The Huffington Post
Dan Sabbagh / Guardian:
Saddam Hussein underpants photos defended by News Corp — Rupert Murdoch's company stands by decision to publish pictures in 2005, despite claims of payments made to US troops — Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation has aggressively defended the publication of pictures of Saddam Hussein …
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Andrew Kirell / Mediaite:
Fox & MSNBC Became More Extreme As Election Day Neared, Reports Pew — Rival cable news channels Fox News and MSNBC became even more “extreme” in their coverage of President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney during the the last week of the 2012 presidential campaign, says a new Pew study.
Discussion:
Broadcasting & Cable and Journalism.org
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The Hollywood Reporter:
The Hollywood Reporter, After 65 Years, Addresses Role in Blacklist — Billy Wilkerson was nervous. it was July 1946, and The Hollywood Reporter owner, editor and publisher was preparing to embark on a landmark campaign that would expose communists working in Hollywood.
Discussion:
Pressing Issues
Guardian:
Operation Elveden: CPS to decide whether to bring charges — Prosecutors due to announce decision on criminal charges after investigation into payments by journalists to public officials — Prosecutors will announce on Tuesday if they believe they have enough evidence to bring criminal charges following …
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Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Leveson inquiry: press intrusion victims to meet party leaders
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Dyle Brings Legal, Live TV to Your iPad, With Many Strings Attached — Want to watch live TV on your iPad? You don't have many options. — A handful of networks, including Disney and ESPN, will stream shows to your tablet, but you'll need a cable subscription to make them work.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest and Mashable!
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Tom Rosenstiel to leave Pew's PEJ for API — Project for Excellence in Journalism director Tom Rosenstiel is leaving the organization to become executive director of the American Press Institute. API and the Newspaper Association of America announced in January they would merge.
Discussion:
@vivianschiller
Amy Chozick / New York Times:
Emerging From Scandal, News Corporation Looks at Potential Acquisitions — News Corporation is starting to look like its old self again. — The media conglomerate, which had been on its heels for more than a year because of the phone hacking scandal in Britain, is looking to make acquisitions again.
Discussion:
Poynter
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Nicholas Carlson / Business Insider:
LEAKED: MySpace's Master Plan To Raise $50 Million And Relaunch As A Spotify Killer — The parent company of MySpace is trying to raise $50 million in order to re-launch MySpace as a direct competitor to Spotify and Pandora in 2013. — This is according to documents obtained by Business Insider, which we have included in this post.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, VentureBeat, CNET and The Next Web
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
Slate Scales. But Is It Too Late to the Game? — Since Slate launched in 1996, there's always been the question of whether an online news magazine can attract enough advertising to support high-quality original content without a companion print product. Signs were pointing to “no” …
Michael Wolff / Guardian:
Rupert Murdoch and the Jews — His Twitter slip about the ‘Jewish-owned press’ was revealing - of prejudice, paranoia and neoconism - and none of it is pretty — Whoops. — Rupert Murdoch's unchaperoned tweeting was bound to get him into trouble. On Saturday, he slipped into an antisemitic usage …
Discussion:
CNN, Media Decoder, Poynter, The Wrap, @christhilk and Politico
David Carr / New York Times:
Washington Post's Chief Falters Anew — At 11:45 a.m. last Tuesday, the editorial staff of The Washington Post was summoned on short notice to an announcement on the fifth floor of its building to hear something they already knew — that Marcus Brauchli would be leaving after four years as executive editor.
Discussion:
Poynter, Media Decoder, CJR and Washington Post
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Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Four things the Washington Post's new editor can do to avoid disaster
Four things the Washington Post's new editor can do to avoid disaster
Thanks:@mathewi
Rajeev Syal / Guardian:
BBC execs face grilling by MPs over £450k George Entwistle payoff — Commons committee to question BBC managers over payoff for former director general who resigned over Newsnight affair — MPs are to question BBC executives on Thursday over the £450,000 payoff agreed …
Discussion:
exaronews.com/feed/latest and Media Law Prof Blog
Kevin Nguyen / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The future of the feature: Breaking out of templates to build customized reading experiences — When it comes to reading long form, the web can be an ugly, distracting place. It's the reason why services like Instapaper and Pocket (née Read It Later) exist: to strip content of its context …
Guardian:
Sky magazine tax loophole saved broadcaster up to £40m a year — A magazine for satellite TV customers published by BSkyB was used as a tax avoidance scheme that saved the company up to £40m a year. The broadcaster had been saving millions in VAT by charging satellite customers …