Top News:
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Gore Went to Bat for Al Jazeera, and Himself — Al Gore at the Current TV studios in San Francisco in 2005. He said Al Jazeera's coverage was “thorough, fair and informative.” — Al Gore's Current TV was never popular with viewers, but it was a hit where it counted: with cable and satellite providers.
Discussion:
Politico, Erik Wemple, TVNewser, Business Insider, The Daily Caller, Mediaite, @ggreenwald and Wall Street Journal
RELATED:
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Time Warner Cable Says It Will Keep ‘Open Mind’ on Reinstating Al Jazeera — Time Warner Cable minced no words when it announced on Wednesday night that it was dropping Current TV, just hours after Al Jazeera acquired the channel. “Our agreement with Current has been terminated …
Reuters:
Al Jazeera's new channel struggles for U.S. distribution — (Reuters) - Al Jazeera's announced plans to establish a new U.S. cable news channel via the purchase of Current TV isn't even 48 hours old and already it finds itself in a vicious battle to retain distribution rights.
Discussion:
PandoDaily
David Zurawik / Baltimore Sun:
Why Al Jazeera buying Current is a good thing for media, country — Forget the vapid personality chatter about Al Gore and Glenn Beck — I don't care if Al Gore got more money than he ever deserved for his pathetic channel, or Glenn Beck got the short end of the stick in trying to buy …
Jeanine Poggi / AdAge:
New Cable Channels Keep Coming Despite Content-Cost Crackdown
New Cable Channels Keep Coming Despite Content-Cost Crackdown
Discussion:
Globe and Mail
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Questions Linger for Hosts After Sale of Current TV
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Bad news for cord cutters: Al Jazeera America won't be live streamed online
Bad news for cord cutters: Al Jazeera America won't be live streamed online
Discussion:
Media Decoder, Wall Street Journal, The Daily Caller, Bloomberg, DealBook and AllThingsD
Associated Press:
China says New York Times reporter was not expelled, says his visa application was incomplete — BEIJING — The Chinese government said Friday that it did not expel a New York Times reporter who had to leave mainland China this week after he failed to obtain new press credentials.
RELATED:
Associated Press:
Journalists confront China censors over editorial
Journalists confront China censors over editorial
Discussion:
Big News Network.com
Evan Osnos / The New Yorker Blog:
China, the American Press, and the State Department
China, the American Press, and the State Department
Discussion:
TechCrunch and China Law & Policy
Ann Friedman:
Journalism Is Personal — You probably read this post at Gawker, in which Hamilton Nolan aims to put the fear of Cronkite into the aspiring Thought Catalog contributors of America. You probably also read that Andrew Sullivan is striking out on his own, hoping his readers will pony …
Discussion:
The Buttry Diary and Guardian
RELATED:
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Sullivan's new Dish raises $333,000 from over 11K people in first 24 hours
Sullivan's new Dish raises $333,000 from over 11K people in first 24 hours
Discussion:
Pressthink, The Daily Dish, GigaOM, VentureBeat, The New York Observer, The Atlantic Online, Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog, PSFK and Felix Salmon
Mathew Ingram / paidContent:
Why Tumblr and BuzzFeed are on a collision course in 2013 — The decline and fall of traditional media empires is one side of the ongoing turmoil within the industry, but the other side is the rise of disruptive new players, and two of the most prominent names in that category are BuzzFeed and Tumblr.
Discussion:
Fortune, Adweek, Hollywood Reporter, The Next Web, Forbes and Elapsed Time
RELATED:
Patrick Smith / TheMediaBriefing:
Cats, politics, $46 million in funding and a UK launch: It's time to start taking Buzzfeed seriously
Cats, politics, $46 million in funding and a UK launch: It's time to start taking Buzzfeed seriously
Discussion:
BuzzFeed, eMedia Vitals, Bloomberg and VatorNews
Alyson Shontell / Business Insider:
BuzzFeed Is Now Valued At ~$200 Million, But Investors Think It Has Billion-Dollar Potential
BuzzFeed Is Now Valued At ~$200 Million, But Investors Think It Has Billion-Dollar Potential
Discussion:
AdAge, NetNewsCheck Latest, FishbowlNY and NYConvergence.com
Nat Ives / AdAge:
Digital Cracks 50% of Ad Revenue at Wired Magazine — First for the Title Is an Encouraging Sign for the Industry — Digital contributed half of all ad revenue at Wired magazine in the final three months of 2012, a first for the title and an encouraging sign for an industry …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals, Business Insider, Media & Entertainment and NetNewsCheck Latest
Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch:
Down And Out: Spotify Halts Its Music Download Service In Europe, But How Many Were Using It Anyway? [Updated] — Spotify has made a mark in the music business with its hugely popular music streaming service, now with 20 million subscribers, 5 million of which pay monthly for it.
Discussion:
AllThingsD, Pocket-lint, hypebot, Electronista and The Verge
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
CinemaNow or never: Rovi puts its digital movie store up for sale — After having spent $720 million on it two years ago, Rovi announced Thursday that it intends to sell its Rovi Entertainment Store digital video platform, which was formerly known as CinemaNow.
Discussion:
Home Media Magazine
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Press and broadcast coalition warns against changes to contempt law — National papers and broadcasters oppose law change that could see courts given power to order removal of archive web stories — A coalition of national newspapers and broadcasters are to warn against possible changes …
Steve O'Hear / TechCrunch:
Legimi Wants To Be The ‘Spotify For Ebooks’ With A Business Model That Relies On You Reading Less — Legimi is definitely a startup I'll be watching closely in 2013. Put simply, it aims to be the ‘Spotify for ebooks,’ in which for a monthly subscription, users get access to a potentially infinite library …