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.
RELATED:
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:
Media Decoder
Ryan Chittum / Columbia Journalism Review:
WaPo will, finally, charge online — Anti-paywall forces routed in the US; attention shifts to Kings 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.
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Press regulation at risk as newspaper groups refuse to endorse deal — Publishers of Daily Mail, Sun and Telegraph taking high-level legal advice before deciding whether to join new watchdog — The political consensus over a new system of press regulation is running into difficulty …
RELATED:
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Phone-hacking victims give press regulation deal cautious welcome
Phone-hacking victims give press regulation deal cautious welcome
Discussion:
Guido Fawkes
Patrick Wintour / Guardian:
Press regulation deal: the key points
Press regulation deal: the key points
Discussion:
WWD Media Headlines, The Sun, Jon Slattery and Big News Network.com
Erik Wemple:
On cable TV, talk is cheap — and profitable — One way that cable news differs from more traditional news providers — newspapers, for example — is cash. They make a lot of it, that is. We hear that Fox News tallies net profits in the range of $1 billion.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, TVNewser and Mediaite
RELATED:
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 …
RELATED:
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Many j-schools 'still haven't mastered the Web,' Knight says
Many j-schools 'still haven't mastered the Web,' Knight says
Discussion:
danielbachhuber and Knight Foundation
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:
nbcuniversal.presscentre.com, Politico, AllThingsD, Media & Entertainment, Talking Points Memo, @vivianschiller and Adweek
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 …
Discussion:
Politico, Maza's Bazaar, Poynter and The Dish
RELATED:
Joe Coscarelli / New York Magazine:
Steve Brill Gets the Last Laugh Over Epic Health-Care Story
Steve Brill Gets the Last Laugh Over Epic Health-Care Story
Discussion:
NPR
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
ABC Works on an App for Streaming Shows to Mobile Devices — THE WALT DISNEY Company, while sorting out the future of the online video Web site Hulu, has an app in the works that may render Hulu passé for some people. — The app will live stream ABC programming to the phones …
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:
Business Insider, @edyong209, @jasonboyett, @bclayne and @pkafka
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
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:
The Raw Story, Mediaite, Guardian, Jezebel, Gawker, Mediaite, The Daily Caller and Rehak/Stuebing Mostly Media
Quentin Hardy / NYT Bits:
Bloomberg Doubles Its Tech Television — Updated In a world of shrinking newsrooms, real expansion is an increasingly rare story. But next Monday, Bloomberg West, Bloomberg Television's show on technology, will double its daily programming to two hours. Along with the existing afternoon program …
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:
VentureBeat, AllThingsD, The Verge, PopWatch, Laughing Squid and What's Trending
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Citing “flat-lined” sales, Andrew Sullivan's Dish lowers paywall to 5 free stories every 60 days — The Dish is making its paywall stricter in its second month, Andrew Sullivan wrote Monday. He cited sales that “flat-lined once the meter reset for most people after March 8,” …
Discussion:
The Dish