Top News:
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
‘Let Me Tweet That For You’ site raises concerns for journalists — This tweet looks pretty real, doesn't it? — It's not, though. I faked that tweet using a Web service named “Let Me Tweet That For You.” It's pretty simple — you type in a Twitter username and a message …
Discussion:
Brian Solis, The Huffington Post, The Verge and AllThingsD
Nellie Andreeva / Deadline.com:
CBS Poised To Buy Half Of TV Guide, Partner With Lionsgate — EXCLUSIVE: CBS Corp, which already owns/co-owns broadcast networks CBS and the CW, pay cable network Showtime, and international TV channels, is adding a domestic basic cable network to its portfolio.
Discussion:
Broadcasting & Cable
Jeremy Greenfield / Forbes:
Giving Away the Nook: Barnes & Noble Getting Desperate? — Well, we finally have a free e-reader on the market, but it's not the Beagle from txtr or a Kindle, like we expected: It's the Nook Simple Touch from Barnes & Noble. — The $79 e-reader is being given away with purchase of a Nook HD+ tablet …
Discussion:
paidContent, Digital Book World, TechCrunch and Softpedia News
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
The New Republic Fires Timothy Noah — On Thursday, New Republic columnist Timothy Noah received an email from editor Frank Foer asking him to meet at 2:30 pm on Friday. That's when Foer told Noah that he was out of a job. — When Noah got to the New Republic's lobby, on the way out the door …
Discussion:
New York Magazine, Media Decoder and Politico
Guardian:
Blogs likely to be excluded from press reforms by House of Lords — Prominent web writers warn punitive measures would force many of them to close down, thereby stifling transparency — Fears that bloggers and small-scale news websites will be dragged into the new proposed system of press regulation …
The Stream:
News from Anonymous — A branch of the hacktivist collective Anonymous, @YourAnonNews (YAN), announced on Wednesday that it plans to start its own publicly funded news site. The move will allow the account to operate without the restrictions of companies like Twitter and Tumblr, where it is currently hosted.
Ritchie King / Quartz:
Skinny and white: the fashionable new look for news sites — Call it fashion week for the news industry. This month, three major American journalism shops have said they will be redesigning their websites: Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times.
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Bloomberg Businessweek expands non-postal delivery — Bloomberg Businessweek is expanding its alternate delivery program via a partnership with Gannett, the magazine will announce Monday. Subscribers in Cincinnati, Asheville, N.C., and 13 other markets will by July be able to receive …
Rosie Gray / BuzzFeed:
Media, UN Battle One Man Blogger Rebellion — The U.N.'s maverick blogger finds himself at odds with his fellow reporters. “I'm not an insane person.” — An independent journalist whose muckraking coverage of the U.N. earned him profiles in the New Yorker and the New York Times has become …
Jim Romenesko:
Boston Globe editor: 'We're a stable enterprise. We're a cash positive enterprise' — Boston Globe editor Brian McGrory spoke yesterday at the MIT Center for Civic Media. Here's what he said, according to the live blog that “may contain errors”: — The Globe, which is on the market …
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Changing trains: The Local East Village, NYU's hyperlocal blog, moves from The New York Times to New York magazine — NEW YORK — New York University's hyperlocal East Village blog has found a new home and a new name. After a two-and-a-half-year partnership with The New York Times …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and New York Times
Drew Olanoff / TechCrunch:
Posthaven Launches In Public Beta, Has Saved 850K Posts Since Posterous Announced Its Shutdown Date Of April 30th — Once Twitter acquired Posterous, we knew that it was going to shut down at some point, as there was no way that the micro-blogging service would support a fully featured alternative platform.