Top News:
Andrew Romano / The Daily Beast:
An Oral History of Newsweek Magazine — For the last print issue of Newsweek, Andrew Romano compiles an oral history of the storied magazine. — Peter Goldman should be famous. As the voice of Newsweek from 1962 to 1988—the ace writer at a magazine read by as many as 20 million people each week …
Discussion:
The Daily Beast and Capital New York
RELATED:
Joe Weisenthal / Business Insider:
Newsweek's Final Ever Print Cover Features A... Hashtag?
Newsweek's Final Ever Print Cover Features A... Hashtag?
Discussion:
@thetinabeast, The Verge, @sacca, BBC, The Huffington Post, Mashable!, FishbowlNY, @mat and @rsarver
Peter Finn / Washington Post:
Lanza's brother denies giving Facebook interview to New York Post — The brother of the Connecticut school shooter, Adam Lanza, said through a spokesman Sunday that he never conducted a Facebook interview with the New York Post and that any statements or postings attributed to him were fabricated.
Discussion:
New York Post
David Streitfeld / New York Times:
Amazon Book Reviews Deleted in a Purge Aimed at Manipulation — Giving raves to family members is no longer acceptable. Neither is writers' reviewing other writers. But showering five stars on a book you admittedly have not read is fine. — After several well-publicized cases involving writers buying …
Discussion:
The Big Picture, Gizmodo and The Verge
RELATED:
Dan Gillmor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Do the math — The coming year will feature a surge in evidence-based journalism. — A high point of this month's NewsFoo gathering of journalists and technologists was a call to quality by a prominent non-journalist. Asked what advice he had for the craft, Harper Reed …
David Carr / New York Times:
John Miller of CBS, at Home on Both Sides of the Police Tape — On the day of the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., reporters were struggling and failing to get their arms around a story too horrible to fathom. At our house, we stared at the incremental television coverage and came to realize that no one really knew anything.
Margaret Sullivan / New York Times:
Getting It First or Getting It Right? — THE media critic Jack Shafer wrote recently that, in the age of Twitter, the public had better get used to a new fact of life: News stories, especially the early reports of breaking news events, are very likely to be inaccurate.
Discussion:
@antderosa, @davidfolkenflik, Kirk LaPointe's … and Pressing Issues
The Huffington Post UK:
Deport Piers Morgan Petition Gains 30,000 Signatures As CNN Host Attacks Second Amendment — The White House could be forced to respond to a gun lobby petition to deport Piers Morgan, which objects to how the CNN host and former British tabloid editor has attacked the right to bear arms in the wake of the Sandy Hook school massacre.
Discussion:
Politico, @ggreenwald, Sky News, @jason_pontin, ITV News and ibtimes.co.uk
Robert Feder / Time Out Chicago:
Wire cutters: Tribune Co. newspapers dropping AP — The Chicago Tribune and six other newspapers owned by Tribune Co. are dropping the services of Associated Press, effective in early January. — In addition to the flagship Tribune, other company-owned papers cutting ties …
Lara O'Reilly / Marketing Week:
Mail Online MD James Bromley steps down — James Bromley, the Mail Online's managing director, is leaving the company after almost five years in the post to “move on to a new challenge”. It is not yet known whether Bromley has a job to go to. In his time at Associated Newspapers …
Discussion:
The Kernel
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of 2013 wizardry: Tribune, Buffett, Murdoch, Paton, Bloomberg, and more — It takes at least three special qualities to be in — much less to enter — the newspaper business these days. We can borrow them from L. Frank Baum: heart, courage, and smarts.
Associated Press:
British paper sues Lance Armstrong for $1.5m over lost libel action — Sunday Times paid now-disgraced cyclist $485,000 in 2006 over claims that he had taken performance-enhancing drugs — The disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong is being sued for more than $1.5m by a British newspaper …
Jack Mirkinson / The Huffington Post:
Wayne LaPierre's Claim That ‘Most’ Of Media Is Protected By Armed Guards Rejected By Media — Members of the media reacted with surprise at the contention by the head of the NRA that most of them are protected by armed guards. — Wayne LaPierre has made media criticism a central point of his response to the massacre in Newtown.