Top News:
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
AOL Starts Patch Cuts, and Up to 500 People May Lose Their Jobs — AOL has begun making mass layoffs at its Patch unit. — By the time the cuts are over, AOL could end up reducing the local news network's 1,000-worker labor force by half, according to people familiar with the plans.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM, Poynter, @romenesko, GeekWire, @ryanmartin87, AdAge, Slate, @hollywoodspin, Prospect Heights Patch News, @abeaujon, TechCrunch, Business Insider, Corporate Intelligence, Wall Street Journal, Media & Entertainment, @romenesko, Street Fight, @ckrewson, @dangillmor, New York Times, Reuters, Los Angeles Times, Bloomberg, The Wrap and GigaOM
RELATED:
Tom Gara / Corporate Intelligence:
Anyone Want a Patch? Going Once, Going Twice...
Anyone Want a Patch? Going Once, Going Twice...
Discussion:
AdAge and Talking New Media
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
New Media Pink Slips Cost Less Than Old Media Pink Slips
New Media Pink Slips Cost Less Than Old Media Pink Slips
Discussion:
@edmundlee
Steve Kovach / Business Insider:
Here's The Story Of How AOL Fired 350 Patch Employees Today
Here's The Story Of How AOL Fired 350 Patch Employees Today
Discussion:
@stevekovach
Kim Masters / Hollywood Reporter:
Fox TV Studios Won't Produce NBC Hillary Clinton Miniseries (Exclusive) — The project has prompted the Republican National Committee to ban the network from hosting 2016 presidential debates. — The tantalizing spectacle of Fox Television Studios producing a Hillary Clinton miniseries …
Discussion:
Deadline.com, New York Times, Politico, National Enquirer, @seanspicer, @hellion1111, @jbflint, @logandobson, Inside TV and The Huffington Post
RELATED:
Dylan Byers / Politico:
RNC's NBC, CNN boycott win for Univision — In a highly anticipated move, the Republican National Committee voted unanimously on Friday to deny NBC and CNN the rights to host or sponsor a Republican primary debate unless they cancel their respective Hillary Clinton film projects.
Discussion:
Mediaite, The Huffington Post, The Week, @theplumlinegs and @thisisjorge
Zeke J Miller / TIME:
GOP Votes To Punish Networks Over Clinton Projects Read more: http://swampland.time.com/2013/08/16/ gop-will-vote-to-punish-networks-over- clinton-projects-friday/#ixzz2c985qBdX — The vote to boycott CNN and NBC as debate sponsors is expected to pass easily — Republican leaders will vote Friday …
Discussion:
Mediaite, Variety, Reuters, The Huffington Post, Vanity Fair, @poniewozik, New York Magazine and TheBlaze.com
Alex Weprin / TVNewser:
Al Jazeera America HQ Flooded Shortly After Studio Tour — Al Jazeera America's New York City headquarters was temporarily evacuated and staffers were blocked from entering this afternoon due to flooding in the building. The incident comes just four days before AJAM is scheduled to launch across the country.
Discussion:
Politico, TVNewser, FishbowlNY, UnBeige and AdAge
RELATED:
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Ahead of cable channel launch, Al Jazeera starts blocking videos on YouTube — When violence erupted in Cairo this week, Al Jazeera once again became the go-to source for on-the-ground news coverage. The network streamed live from Egypt's capital, and uploaded dozens of videos to its YouTube channel.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post
Matthew Garrahan / Financial Times:
‘Gonzo’ Vice sells stake to 21st Century Fox — Vice Media, the digital media and publishing group that took basketball player Dennis Rodman to North Korea, has sold a 5 per cent stake to 21st Century Fox in a deal that values the company at $1.4bn. — The $70m deal, which will be announced on Monday …
Discussion:
PandoDaily, Guardian, Deadline.com, Hollywood Reporter, @pkafka, @alisa_redux, @gabrielsnyder, @tomgara, @arainert, @fieldproducer, @timamolloy, @roysekoff, @jaysamit, @mattgarrahan, @rafat, @pkafka, @jeffjarvis, @rafat, @digidave, @adamclarkestes, @nbj914, @bmorrissey and New York Magazine
Jack Shafer:
News never made money, and is unlikely to — Sometime in the mid-1990s, the Web began to peel from the daily American newspaper bundle its most commercial elements, essentially the editorial sections against which advertisements could be reliably sold. Coverage of sports, business and market news …
Discussion:
FishbowlDC and The FJP
Reuters:
Former Sun-Times owner ordered to pay $4.1 million — The Securities and Exchange Commission has banned former Sun-Times owner Conrad Black from acting as a director of a U.S. company and said he must pay $4.1 million in restitution in a settlement that ends a long-standing lawsuit …
Discussion:
GlobalPost, Guardian and @kevglobal
RELATED:
Anna Clark / Columbia Journalism Review:
Does Gannett think its own papers matter? — As job cuts hit the chain, coverage—and answers—are in short supply — DETROIT, MI — Want to learn what the deal is with the hundreds of layoffs unfolding at Gannett newspapers across the country? You can get slivers of the story …
Discussion:
Gannett Blog
Gavriel Hollander / Press Gazette:
Nick Davies joins Paul Lewis in Guardian's US team as paper bolsters stateside reporting corps — Investigative reporter Nick Davies is set to move to Los Angeles to join The Guardian's burgeoning US team. — Davies, the author of Flat Earth News, shot to prominence with his revelations …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY
Laura Hazard Owen / GigaOM:
Bad sign for e-readers? E Ink sales plunge — Here's a sign that e-readers are struggling in the U.S.: E Ink Holdings, the Taiwan-based company that makes e-reader screens for companies such as Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Sony, just had its worst quarter in four years.
Discussion:
Taipei Times and TechCrunch
Jay Rosen / Pressthink:
When you're in a Fourth Estate situation — As things stand today, the Fourth Estate is a state of mind. Some in the press have it, some don't. Some who have it are part of the institutional press. Some, like Ladar Levison and Edward Snowden, are not.
Discussion:
On the Media, @jjn1, @ggreenwald, Kirk LaPointe's …, TED Blog and The Drum
RELATED:
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
Edward Snowden To HuffPost: Media Being Misled
Edward Snowden To HuffPost: Media Being Misled
Discussion:
Poynter, msnbc.com, FP Passport, The Huffington Post, CNN, @jayrosen_nyu, Globe and Mail, Techdirt and New York Magazine
Derek Thompson / The Atlantic Online:
The Global Dominance of ESPN — Why hasn't anybody figured out how to beat “The Worldwide Leader in Sports”? — “This is the chart I was talking about. This is powerful.” — Artie Bulgrin, ESPN's director of research, is hunched over an iPad in a wood-paneled conference room …
Discussion:
The Atlantic Online, Fast Company and The Verge
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Meet the man who is building a hyperlocal aggregation platform for the Chicago Sun-Times — Newspaper publishers everywhere are trying to do more with less, and the battle for local readers is a big part of their struggle, since it is one area where larger players aren't as competitive …
Discussion:
@jason_pontin and Poynter
Katherine Rushton / Telegraph:
News UK could face corporate charges in Britain — Rupert Murdoch's UK newspaper business is being investigated over complicity with alleged phone-hacking and bribery of police and public officials by its journalists, raising the likelihood that it will face corporate charges in Britain.
Discussion:
The Independent, @davidfolkenflik and @davidfolkenflik
Kelly McBride / Poynter:
NPR ombud's latest report raises important questions, but it's not without flaws — The modern ombudsman has been a prominent fixture in a few of the largest American newsrooms since The New York Times instituted its public editor in the wake of the Jayson Blair debacle a decade ago.
Rachel Bartlett / Journalism.co.uk:
Medium: One year of publishing ‘things that matter’ — Since launching in private beta last year, Medium has been building up its platform, which aims to offer a simple but ‘beautiful’ reading and writing experience — Read more — Other top stories — Also on Journalism.co.uk...
Discussion:
@fmanjoo
Economist:
Digital media: Counting the change — THIS summer a made-for-TV movie about a tornado carrying man-eating sharks was a surprise hit in America. The preposterous plot of “Sharknado” may strike a chord with media bosses who have watched the internet ravage their business over the past decade.
Discussion:
@justinhendrix and @econbizfin