Top News:
Steven Mufson / Washington Post:
The Washington Post to charge frequent users of its Web site — This summer, The Washington Post will start charging frequent users of its Web site, asking those who look at more than 20 articles or multimedia features a month to pay a fee, although the company has not yet decided how much it will charge.
Discussion:
Politico, JIMROMENESKO.COM, FishbowlNY, TechCrunch, The Atlantic Online, Poynter, CNET, The Verge, WebProNews, @karynelevy, @goldfarb, @hblodget, @bostonabrams, AppNewser and The Huffington Post
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Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
The Washington Post Is Building a Paywall (With a Huge Hole) — For the Washington Post and digital subscriptions, it's better late than never. — Two years after its great northern rival, The New York Times, ushered in an era of paywall experimentation in the newspaper industry …
Discussion:
paidContent
Ryan Chittum / Columbia Journalism Review:
The Washington Post will, finally, charge online — Anti-paywall forces routed in the U.S. Attention shifts to King's Cross — The Washington Post is making it official: It will put up a metered paywall sometime this summer, the paper reports. — But the Post is hardly diving in.
BBC:
Press regulation deal struck by parties — David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband claim victory in Leveson deal — A deal has been struck between the three main political parties on measures to regulate the press, Labour has said. — Leader Ed Miliband said the deal would protect …
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Patrick Wintour / Guardian:
Press regulation deal: the key points — The main sticking points in the post-Leveson discussions that were ironed out during late-night discussions — • The royal charter — The royal charter will be entrenched through statute so that it cannot be changed by ministers …
Discussion:
Jon Slattery, The Sun and Big News Network.com
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Phone-hacking victims give press regulation deal cautious welcome
Phone-hacking victims give press regulation deal cautious welcome
Discussion:
Guido Fawkes
Christine Haughney / New York Times:
Time's Health Care Opus Is a Hit — Publishing a 36-page cover article called “Bitter Pill: Why Medical Bills Are Killing Us” certainly didn't seem like a shameless attempt to bolster newsstand sales for Time magazine. — But the 25,000-word article that Steven Brill wrote …
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Joe Coscarelli / New York Magazine:
Steve Brill Gets the Last Laugh Over Epic Health-Care Story
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Nearly one-third of U.S. adults have abandoned a news outlet due to dissatisfaction — Readers, viewers and listeners may not have followed the contraction of the news business closely, but they're beginning to notice the effects of five dismal years for many publishers.
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Patrick Wensink / Salon:
My Amazon bestseller made me nothing — My novel shot to the top of the site's bestseller list last summer. You won't believe how little I got paid — In one more week I was going to be a millionaire. — At least, that was the rumor circulating around my wife's family.
Discussion:
@pkafka, @bclayne, @jasonboyett, @edyong209, Business Insider and @frannydink
Keach Hagey / Digits:
NBCNews.com Snags Yahoo News Editor-in-Chief Amid First Wave of Hires — NBCNews.com will not be another web portal. — That's the message in the first batch of hires that the new site announced Monday, nine months after it was created following the end of the 16-year joint venture between between NBC and Microsoft.
Discussion:
Politico, Talking Points Memo, nbcuniversal.presscentre.com, @vivianschiller and Beet.TV
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Steve Coll named dean of Columbia Journalism School — Steve Coll, the decorated Pulitzer Prize-winning New Yorker staff writer, has been named dean of Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism. — He replaces Nick Lemann, a fellow New Yorker writer who announced last October he would be stepping …
Lewis DVorkin / Forbes:
Inside Forbes: Amid the Finger Pointing, Journalists Need to Explore New Payment Models — I spent eight years at AOL and I'll say this: I saw none of the great, all of the bad and some of the good. Throughout, the media took dead aim at our strategic zig-zags and revolving-door CEOs.
Discussion:
Poynter, @jayrosen_nyu and @felixsalmon
Katherine Fung / The Huffington Post:
CNN, Fox News, MSNBC Air Name Of Steubenville Rape Victim — CNN, Fox News and MSNBC recently aired the name of the underage victim in the Steubenville rape trial during reports about the case. — Two high school football players were found guilty of raping a 16-year old girl in a controversial case in Steubenville, Ohio.
Discussion:
Mediaite, The Raw Story, Jezebel and BAGnewsNotes
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Kia Makarechi / The Huffington Post:
CNN Under Fire For Coverage Of Rape Trial
CNN Under Fire For Coverage Of Rape Trial
Discussion:
Poynter, Guardian, TVNewser, Gawker, Mediaite, The Raw Story, Jezebel, CNN, HyperVocal and @olivia_collette
Shalini Ramachandran / Wall Street Journal:
Verizon Sends Signal on TV Fees — FiOS Operator Presses Smaller Media Firms for Deals Based on Audience Size — Verizon Communications Inc. is proposing to shake up the pay-television business based on a simple premise: it wants to tie the fees it pays to carry TV channels to how many people actually watch them.
Discussion:
CNET, Wired, VentureBeat, Deadline.com, FierceCable, Los Angeles Times, Engadget, Gizmodo, 24/7 Wall St., Electronista and The Verge
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Publisher Jesse Angelo is restructuring the money-losing New York Post's revenue operation — For years, Jesse Angelo had been a rising star in the editing ranks of Rupert Murdoch's Australian, British and U.S. tabloids. — Now, fresh off his doomed voyage as editor of News Corp's tablet title …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY
Erik Hayden / Hollywood Reporter:
Reddit Debuts Original Web Mini-Series (Exclusive) — The site is debuting three episodes of a series based on the subreddit “Explain Like I'm Five.” — Online community Reddit is experimenting with original web programming and is debuting three episodes of a new web series on Monday.
Discussion:
AllThingsD, PopWatch, The Verge and What's Trending