Top News:
BBC:
Savile inquiry: Paxman says DJ rumours were ‘common gossip’ — Jeremy Paxman told a BBC inquiry into Newsnight's axed Jimmy Savile investigation that it was “common gossip” the DJ liked “young” people. — The presenter said it was assumed they were girls, but that he did not know “whether it was girls or boys”.
Discussion:
Guardian, Telegraph, @benfenton and National Updates
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BBC:
BBC Savile inquiry: Who said what
BBC Savile inquiry: Who said what
Discussion:
Sky News, @joshhalliday, @legalbrat, @benfenton, @steven_swinford and @julian5news
Telegraph:
BBC acting like ‘secret service’ by censoring criticism, Lord McAlpine says
BBC acting like ‘secret service’ by censoring criticism, Lord McAlpine says
Discussion:
Sky News, The Independent and National Updates
Georg Szalai / Hollywood Reporter:
BBC Moves Former Head of News Show That Dropped Jimmy Savile Abuse Report to Archive Post
BBC Moves Former Head of News Show That Dropped Jimmy Savile Abuse Report to Archive Post
Discussion:
@skynewsniall and Daily Mail
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
BBC releases Jimmy Savile scandal transcripts - live coverage
BBC releases Jimmy Savile scandal transcripts - live coverage
Discussion:
Deadline.com, Telegraph, @anunou, National Updates and The Independent
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Print advertising revenue at Washington Post was down 14% in 2012 — Revenue at the Washington Post Co.'s newspaper operations was down 7 percent over 2011, the company said in a release of its fourth-quarter and year-end earnings Friday. Revenue from print advertising was down 12 percent …
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Steven Mufson / Washington Post:
Washington Post Co. reports fourth quarter 2012 loss — The Washington Post Co. reported a fourth quarter 2012 loss of $45.4 million, or $6.57 a share as it took $113 million of charges for goodwill write downs and restructuring, mostly in its Kaplan education subsidiary.
Discussion:
Business Wire and RTTNews
Christine McConville / Boston Herald:
‘Scared’ Globe staffers press for sale answers — Blindsided Boston Globe employees — still reeling after The New York Times Co. put the Hub paper up for sale again — are slated to come face-to-face this morning with a top Gray Lady exec for the start of what could be a messy split …
RELATED:
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Who will buy The Boston Globe?
Who will buy The Boston Globe?
Discussion:
The Boston Globe, Boston Herald and Media Nation
Mat Honan / Wired:
Zendesk Security Breach Affects Twitter, Tumblr and Pinterest — Customer service software provider Zendesk announced a security breach that allowed attackers into its system, where they could access data from three customers this week. Wired learned those three clients were Twitter, Pinterest and Tumblr.
Discussion:
Zendesk.com, TechCrunch, Telegraph, ZDNet, CNET, VentureBeat, The Verge, Electronista, The Next Web, AllThingsD, Mashable! and Softpedia News
Chris O'Shea / FishbowlNY:
Uncertainty Pervades Time Inc. as Meredith Talks Continue — Laura Lang, CEO of Time Inc., has finally discussed the Meredith purchase with her staffers. As you know, Meredith is going to purchase Time Inc. and spin it off into a new company. Time Warner will retain Time, Fortune and SI.
Discussion:
New York Post and TVNewser
Neal Ungerleider / Fast Company:
Egypt Crowdsources Censorship — Egypt's communications ministry is asking citizens to report web pages showing blasphemous content. — The Egyptian government is now crowdsourcing censorship efforts. A new web page created by the country's National Telecommunications Registry Agency …
Discussion:
@emilydparker and CNET
Lisa de Moraes / Washington Post:
Soledad O'Brien to leave CNN morning show to produce specials for the network — CNN is sweeping aside its morning-show host, Soledad O'Brien, to make way for new network chief Jeff Zucker's better idea: a morning show anchored by Chris Cuomo and Erin Burnett.
Discussion:
Hollywood Reporter, AL.com, Sturgis, MI, Adweek, Broadcasting & Cable and Media Decoder
Erik Maza / WWD:
Ken Kurson Staying Busy at The New York Observer — SHIFTING SLOWLY: A few weeks ago, Ken Kurson, the new editor in chief of The New York Observer, was at the party for the redesigned New Republic. He had come to the soiree as his boss and friend Jared Kushner's guest.
Discussion:
Capital New York
Elizabeth Jensen / Media Decoder:
CNBC Buys ‘Nightly Business Report’ From Atalaya — “Nightly Business Report,” the pioneer public television series that has struggled in recent years, is getting a new, deep-pocketed commercial owner, the 24-hour business cable channel CNBC, a unit of Comcast's NBCUniversal.
Discussion:
Broadcasting & Cable and The Tell
Eriq Gardner / Hollywood Reporter:
Fox Asks Judge to Stop Dish's New Ad-Skipper (Exclusive) — Six weeks after Dish adds place-shifting to its Hopper service, now called “Dish Anywhere,” Fox files new court papers in another attempt at an injunction. — Fox Television is again making an attempt to shut down Dish Network's advertising-skipping DVR services.
Discussion:
multichannel.com/rss, Bloomberg and Adweek
BBC:
Hacking: No charges for ex-NoW deputy editor — The News of the World newspaper closed in 2011 — The former deputy editor at the now-defunct News of the World newspaper will not face any charges regarding phone hacking, the CPS has announced. — It said Neil Wallis will not face prosecution …
Discussion:
pressgazette.co.uk
Quartz:
Here's the secret list of journalists who start judging the Pulitzer Prizes today — Today at Columbia University in New York, deliberations begin to determine which works of American journalism published last year are deserving of Pulitzer Prizes, the most coveted award in news.
Discussion:
Poynter
Jean H. Lee / Associated Press:
NKorea to allow mobile Internet for foreigners — Associated Press/Jon Chol Jin, File - FILE - In this Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013 photo, foreigners speak with sales person at a Koryolink cellphone rental booth, asking about mobile phone service at Pyongyang Airport ...more
Discussion:
Fast Company, The Verge, CNET, Electronista and The Next Web
Ronald Grover / Reuters:
Who needs an Oscar? Hollywood basks in industry's comeback — (Reuters) - The moguls of Hollywood might engage in more backslapping than usual at Sunday's Oscars, and it won't necessarily be over those golden statuettes. — The tuxedoed movie studio chiefs can boast about an unusually large number …