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2:10 PM ET, February 11, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Katherine Rushton / Telegraph:
Google to launch YouTube on TV  —  Google's battle with broadcasters has stepped up a gear after the company signed a deal with Freesat to launch a full-blown YouTube television channel.  —  The deal will help to boost YouTube, which last year launched 60 broadcast-style channels featuring programmes …
RELATED:
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
Financial Times editor Lionel Barber: ‘News now is not the newspaper’  —  As the FT celebrates its 125th birthday, Barber outlines his plans for a digital revolution  —  Pink is a colour associated with good health and in the past the salmon shades of the Financial Times's pages seemed …
Bill Carter / New York Times:
In Venture With NBC, Esquire Expands Into Television  —  Esquire, the magazine that has relied on the printed page for the last 80 years, is about to make a move into television.  —  On Monday, NBCUniversal will announce that it has concluded a deal with Hearst Magazines to rebrand …
Dr. George Lombardi / Mediaite:
My Patient, Killed By The New York Times  —  I went to the funeral of a 73 year old man who died of metastatic prostate cancer.  He was one of my first patients and we had developed a friendship over the years.  Attending his funeral was my way of showing my respect for the grace and courage he had displayed during his illness.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
No Netflix for Sony, Which Stays With Starz  —  Sony's movie studio has renewed a deal to show its first-run films on the Starz pay-TV service; the new pact now keeps the two companies tied up until 2021.  Many industry observers thought that Netflix, after signing Disney to a landmark deal in December …
RELATED:
Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:   Starz strikes deal to hold on to Sony Pictures
Felix Salmon:
Why the quants won't take over Hollywood  —  Andrew Leonard has a very odd column about Netflix and House of Cards, under the headline “How Netflix is turning viewers into puppets”.  Netflix, you see, has lots of data, and it used that data in the commissioning process for the series:
Discussion: @pkafka, Esquire and @felixsalmon
RELATED:
Michael Wolff / USA Today:
Netflix plays its ‘Cards’ in a new game strategy
Discussion: paidContent
Jim Romenesko:
The Verge considers a print edition  —  Editors of The Verge ("covering the intersection of technology, science, art, and culture") might put out a print edition.  —  “It's something we've talked about quite a bit and something we have seriously looked into (and continue to look into),” …
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
EveryBlock could still be sold, says Schiller, after abrupt closing of hyperlocal pioneer  —  EveryBlock, the hyperlocal news and community discussion site that abruptly closed last week, may be resurrected if NBC can find a suitable buyer.  —  NBC News Chief Digital Officer Vivian Schiller told …
Thomas Fuller / New York Times:
Journalists' E-Mail Accounts Targeted in Myanmar  —  BANGKOK — Several journalists who cover Myanmar said Sunday that they had received warnings from Google that their e-mail accounts might have been hacked by “state-sponsored attackers.”  —  The warnings began appearing last week …
Tim Carmody / The Verge:
Jalopnik reboot hints at new era for Gawker where readers become writers  —  Gawker Media's new Kinja platform adds ways for readers to comment, annotate, and post on each site  —  Gawker's Media's blog network has helped define the professional weblog style, both for words and web design …
Jasper Jackson / TheMediaBriefing:
Datawatch: Global newspaper circulation in decline as disruption reaches emerging economies  —  For years it's been thought that growing newspaper readership in emerging economies - the BRICs and the next 11 - was compensating for declining print circulation in developed world.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Amazon Will Get New CBS Stephen King Series While It's Still on the Air  —  On June 24, CBS starts running “Under the Dome,” a 13-episode miniseries based on a Stephen King novel, produced by Steven Spielberg's Amblin Television.  And on June 28, Amazon Prime customers can begin watching the show online for free.
 
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 More News: 
Natasha Lomas / TechCrunch:
Google Says $80M French Publishers' Fund Won't Be Replicated Elsewhere In Europe
Discussion: WebProNews
Press Gazette:
No plea entered as Sun defence editor faces corruption trial
Discussion: Guardian
David Carr / New York Times:
The Inconvenient but Vital Drone Debate
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of pressing innovation
 Earlier Picks: 
John Cusack / The Huffington Post:
Freedom of the Press Foundation - Updates From Our Front
Discussion: @freedomofpress and Boing Boing
Sara Hamdan / New York Times:
Social Media Firms Move to Capitalize on Popularity in Middle East