Check out Mini-Mediagazer for simple mobiles or Mediagazer Mobile for modern smartphones.
7:20 AM ET, August 11, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Edward Schumacher-Matos / NPR Ombudsman:
S. Dakota Indian Foster Care 1: Investigative Storytelling Gone Awry  —  In October 2011, NPR aired a three-part investigative series by and alleging abuses in the foster care system for Native American children in South Dakota.  With a mix of statements by the reporter and much innuendo …
RELATED:
NPR:
Editors' Note  —  In October 2011, NPR aired a series of reports by correspondent Laura Sullivan about the placement of Native American children in foster care.  The series focused on South Dakota, where it found an unusually high number of native children were placed in non-native foster homes …
Discussion: @davidfolkenflik
Associated Press:
Ombudsman criticizes NPR report on Indian children  —  SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — A year and a half after National Public Radio aired a series criticizing South Dakota's handling of foster care for Native American children, the news agency's ombudsman said the three-part investigative series was “deeply flawed.”
Jim Romenesko:
Listen to AOL CEO Tim Armstrong fire Patch's creative director during a conference call  —  AOL chief executive Tim Armstrong fired Patch creative director Abel Lenz two minutes into Friday's call with Patch employees.  Lenz's sin: Taking a picture of the CEO during his talk.
RELATED:
Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch:
Armstrong Confirms “Hundreds” Of Layoffs At Patch, 400 Sites Shuttered Or Partnered Off, And A New CEO
Alison Langley / Columbia Journalism Review:
Google told German newspapers to opt in, and they did  —  A law meant to make aggregators pay for content has instead caused Google to threaten to remove papers from its news search  —  In July, a month before Germany's controversial copyright law requiring search engines to pay …
Bill Carter / New York Times:
Fox May Produce Clinton Biopic Reviled by G.O.P.  —  The script for the proposed mini-series on the life of the possible presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton hasn't even been written but we may already have a plot twist.  —  While NBC has come under heavy fire, especially from Republican critics …
BBC:
The Pirate Bay survives to turn 10  —  This Saturday fans of The Pirate Bay file-sharing site are set to celebrate its 10th anniversary at a party in Stockholm sponsored by an energy drinks maker.  —  The event - and the service's very survival - is an irritant to rights holders who have used …
Salvador Rodriguez / Los Angeles Times:
Roku tries keeping up with Apple TV, Google Chromecast with update  —  Roku updated its Apple iOS app this week with a feature that streams video stored on the device on users' TVs.  (Roku)  —  Perhaps feeling pressure from Apple and Google, Roku has added a feature that streams video from users' phones to their TV sets.
Lorne Manly / New York Times:
How to Make a TV Drama in the Twitter Age  —  LOS ANGELES — For decades, the TV viewing experience was much the same.  Tune into your favorite show, week by patient week, all on the network's schedule.  Feedback was restricted to faceless Nielsen ratings and perhaps a plaintive letter …
Steve O'Hear / TechCrunch:
Tame Wants To Help Hacks, Flacks, And Other Social Media Types Tame The Noise On Twitter  —  Twitter has become a boon to journalists wanting to break news.  It's also great for surfacing content relevant to niche topics or specific industries if you follow the right users.
Discussion: The Next Web
Ryan Gallagher / Slate:
WikiLeaks' Teenage Benedict Arnold  —  How the FBI used a baby-faced WikiLeaks volunteer to spy on Julian Assange.  —  WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrives at the High Court on July 13, 2011, in London.  At left is Sigurdur Thordarson.  —  When he met Julian Assange for the first time …
Alex Ben Block / Hollywood Reporter:
CBS and Time Warner Cable Resume Negotiations — at a Distance  —  Meanwhile TWC subscribers in Wisconsin, where Journal Broadcasting stations are also blacked out, file a class action suit as the carriage dispute approaches its second week.  —  Even as the war of public war of words continues …
RELATED:
Mike Reynolds / Multichannel:
TWC Customers File Lawsuit over Retrans Disconnect with Milwaukee Station
Morgan Weiland / Electronic Frontier Foundation:
Why Sen. Feinstein Is Wrong About Who's a “Real Reporter”  —  During the Senate Judiciary Committee's August 1 mark-up of the shield law bill aimed at protecting journalists' sources, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) reportedly objected to the definition of journalist provided in the bill as introduced …
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of Mediagazer at 7:20 AM ET, August 11, 2013.

View the current page or another snapshot:


 
 Who's Hiring in Media? 
 
 See Also: 
Mediagazer: site main
Mediagazer River: reverse chronological Mediagazer
Mediagazer Mobile: for phones
Mediagazer Leaderboard: Mediagazer's top sources
 
 Subscribe: 
Mediagazer RSS feed
Mediagazer on X
Mediagazer on Mastodon
 
 
 More News: 
Riva Gold / Digits:
Wikipedia Co-Founder Refuses to Comply With China's Censorship
Jack Mirkinson / The Huffington Post:
Obama's NSA Conference Could Be Subtitled ‘The Guardian Gets Results’
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Jack Dorsey on Twitter's turning point as a news entity: The day a plane landed in the Hudson
Discussion: @mathewi
Jordan Kahn / 9to5Mac:
Twitter #music app gets new ways to discover artists, scans iPhone library for personalized recommendations
Discussion: The Verge, App Advice and The Next Web
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
SpinMedia puts A.J. Daulerio in charge of its music and entertainment properties
Discussion: Fox Sports Radio
 Earlier Picks: 
Laura Hazard Owen / GigaOM:
Google rolls out digital textbooks, to buy and rent — but students should shop around
Discussion: TechCrunch and Softpedia News
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
BBC calls in auditors to widen search for improper executive payoffs
Discussion: Telegraph
Eriq Gardner / Hollywood Reporter:
Studio Fight Against IsoHunt Gets Trial Date
Meg James / Los Angeles Times:
Rupert Murdoch keeps succession plan a secret
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
More than half of Britons access news online