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11:15 AM ET, January 3, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Al Jazeera Seeks a U.S. Voice Where Gore Failed  —  Al Jazeera, the pan-Arab news giant, has long tried to convince Americans that it is a legitimate news organization, not a parrot of Middle Eastern propaganda or something more sinister.  It just bought itself 40 million more chances to make its case.
RELATED:
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
Time Warner Cable Drops Current TV Upon Sale To Al Jazeera  —  NEW YORK — Time Warner Cable pulled the plug on Current TV just hours after news of the cable channel's sale to Al Jazeera became official.  “This channel is no longer available on Time Warner Cable,” read an on-screen message where Current TV used to be found.
Discussion: Media Decoder and Guardian
Nicholas Carlson / Business Insider:
Glenn Beck Tried To Buy Al Gore's Current TV, Which Instead Sold To Al-Jazeera For $500 Million  —  Controversial conservative showman Glenn Beck's media company, The Blaze, wanted to buy the cable TV company Current TV, which is part-owned by Al Gore.  —  But, according to a WSJ report citing …
Discussion: TVNewser and Agence France Presse
Adi Robertson / The Verge:
Andrew Sullivan raises over $100,000 for ad-free blog in first six hours  —  Shortly after announcing that he would be leaving The Daily Beast and moving to a purely subscription-based business model, blogger Andrew Sullivan says he has seen “amazing” results.  “We're well into the six figures,” he tells TechCrunch.
Discussion: Guardian
RELATED:
Andrew Sullivan / The Daily Dish:
New Year, New Dish, New Media
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Andrew Sullivan breaks from the Daily Beast; new Dish to charge $19.99/year
Discussion: The Daily Dish, Poynter and Speakeasy
Jason Del Rey / AdAge:
Buzzfeed Raises $19.3 Million to Make LOL Content for the Social Web  —  Building a Giant War Chest That Signals Greater Ambitions  —  Buzzfeed set out to re-invent the notion of content for the social web by allowing pictures of cute animals to co-exist with serious political coverage.
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Journal News will screen incoming mail after it receives suspicious powder  —  An envelope containing powder was opened by a Journal News employee Wednesday.  “Emergency officials secured the room and the envelope, and the employee underwent decontamination procedures,” John W. Barry reports.
Discussion: lohud.com
RELATED:
Leslie Kaufman / Media Decoder:
Barnes & Noble Reports Tepid Holiday Sales  —  9:44 a.m. |  Updated Barnes & Noble on Thursday reported disappointing holiday sales for the nine-week period ending Dec. 29, particularly for its struggling e-reader business.  —  Retail sales from the company's bookstores and its Web site …
Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
The Atlantic Will Experiment With Online Pay Models In 2013  —  The Atlantic is two things every legacy publishing company would like to be: profitable and more reliant on digital advertising revenues than on print.  But while that may have been good enough in 2012, for 2013 the magazine has a new goal …
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Michele Norris Returns to NPR  —  Michele Norris, the NPR host who took a 15-month leave of absence while her husband worked for the Obama campaign, will return to the public radio network in February, NPR said Thursday.  —  But Ms. Norris will not resume hosting “All Things Considered,” …
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Five officers in Met's phone-hacking probe face misconduct allegations  —  Five police officers and a civilian worker involved in the Metropolitan police's phone-hacking investigation have faced misconduct allegations, Scotland Yard has confirmed.  The group included three detective constables …
Discussion: PressGazette and The Sun
Steve Friess / Politico:
C-SPAN apologizes for racy show titles  —  C-SPAN apologized Wednesday for a bizarre scheduling snafu that resulted in its online feed being topped with the title “Just Plain Dick” during the Senate's fiscal cliff debate on New Year's Eve.  —  “You may have seen tweets and postings online asserting …
Andy McSmith / The Independent:
Plans for the Privy Council to regulate Britain's newspapers  —  It was set up in 1231 by Henry III.  It met every day under Elizabeth I. But under Elizabeth II it hasn't been convened for 25 years.  So why does David Cameron think this centuries-old club can regulate the press?
 
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 More News: 
Christine Haughney / New York Times:
Maxim Recruits a Readership in Uniform
Dylan Byers / Politico:
Sunshine on the paywall horizon
Discussion: Financial Times
Richard Verrier / Los Angeles Times:
Hollywood keeps its tax break in ‘fiscal cliff’ deal
Discussion: The Wrap
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Culture Editor Jonathan Landman to leave NYT
Discussion: The Wrap
 Earlier Picks: 
Reuters:
NY Times loses bid to uncover details on drone strikes
Discussion: Gothamist and Politico
Jim Romenesko:
Boston Globe shutters its New York City sales office
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Why Gawker honored news blackout for James Foley but not Richard Engel
Mackenzie Weinger / Politico:
Washington Times to become ‘digital-first’