Top News:
Tim Carmody / The Verge:
Goodreads is no Instagram: Amazon paid about $150 million — Estimates of the company's billion-dollar purchase price were sadly misguided — Terms of Amazon's acquisition of Goodreads haven't been disclosed, but that won't stop people from speculating. Bloomberg Businessweek put forward …
Discussion:
AllThingsD, Forbes and WebProNews
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Jeff John Roberts / paidContent:
Authors Guild warns of monopoly in Amazon's purchase of Goodreads — The literary world gasped on Thursday when Amazon announced it had acquired Goodreads, a popular social networks that lets book lovers connect and share reviews with one another. The deal gives Amazon control …
Discussion:
The Authors Guild, GalleyCat, Forbes, WebProNews and Bloomberg
Kyle Stock / Businessweek:
Rampant Speculation: How Much Did Amazon Pay for Goodreads? — Valuing a social network is part art, part science, and part nonsense, but the spectrum has narrowed a bit in the past couple of years as sites like Pinterest and Twitter closed financing rounds and companies like LinkedIn hit public markets.
Discussion:
Betabeat, Business Insider, ZDNet, PandoDaily, LA Observed, @chrisdmasters, @dkiesow, @gcompadre, @michaelwolf, @alexckaufman, @percival and goodreads.com
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Ryan Chittum / Columbia Journalism Review:
BusinessWeek's billion-dollar boo-boo — A poor piece spreads bogus news about Amazon's Goodreads acquisition — Bloomberg BusinessWeek makes itself look silly today, running a speculative piece on how much Amazon paid for its latest acquisition, Goodreads. — Here's the headline:
Discussion:
Businessweek
Caroline O'Donovan / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Tuesday Q&A: Amanda Zamora on participation metrics, deeper engagement, and why ProPublica is heading to Reddit — When Amanda Zamora left The Washington Post for ProPublica last year, she said wanted to get back to her true love — social media. She also saw it as an opportunity to step …
Karen Rothmyer / Columbia Journalism Review:
Kenya: a public editor learns her value — Shortly after I became the Kenya Star's public editor in early 2011, the paper published a story under the headline “Police move to stop sex party at Muliro Garden,” about the sorry state of a park in one of Kenya's outlying towns.
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
NPR to End ‘Talk of the Nation’ — BOSTON — NPR is ending the 21-year-old call-in radio show “Talk of the Nation” and encouraging local stations to replace it with an expanded version of “Here and Now,” an afternoon newscast that is produced here. — The plan, announced Friday …
Discussion:
NPR, Poynter, Talking Biz News, LA Observed, The Huffington Post, Yahoo! News, NPR, Politico and The Wrap
Jake New / Wired Campus:
Journal's Editorial Board Resigns in Protest of Publisher's Policy Toward Authors — [Updated (3/27/2013, 12:46 p.m.) with reaction from Taylor & Francis Group.] — The editor and the entire editorial board of the Journal of Library Administration have resigned in response to a conflict …
Discussion:
Feral Librarian, bookforum.com, Above the Law and Boing Boing
Greg Sandoval / The Verge:
Biting the hand that feeds you: why are record labels fighting Pandora? — Labels want streaming and web radio to grow the pie, but want their share too — A few years ago, leaders from the major record companies planted the seeds from which they hoped would spring the next generation of music distributors.
Discussion:
Softpedia News, The Drum, 9to5Mac, BGR, App Advice and MacRumors
Eliza Kern / paidContent:
Generation Mooch? Why 20-somethings have a hard time paying for content — I distinctly remember learning how to read, and it wasn't from a book or in a kindergarten classroom. — It was sitting at the breakfast table with my Dad every morning, when we would read the weather section of the Washington Post.
Discussion:
TeleRead
Michael Malone / Broadcasting & Cable:
Nexstar Signs Letter of Intent for CCA Stations — Parties agree on $275 million for station group — Nexstar has signed a letter of intent to acquire the Communications Corp. of America (CCA) stations for $275 million, according to sources with knowledge of the negotiations.
Douglas Martin / New York Times:
Bob Teague, WNBC Reporter Who Helped Integrate TV News, Is Dead at 84 — Bob Teague, who joined WNBC-TV in New York in 1963 as one of the city's first black television journalists and went on to work as a reporter, anchorman and producer for more than three decades, died on Thursday in New Brunswick, N.J. He was 84.
Discussion:
TVSpy