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3:45 PM ET, August 29, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
NPR:
Area Man Realizes He's Been Reading Fake News For 25 Years  —  Before Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert became establishments in news satire, there was The Onion.  Thursday, “America's Finest News Source” turns 25.  —  Two college students founded the fake news organization …
RELATED:
Rosie Gray:
The Onion Denies Taking A Serious Line On Syria  —  Satire or campaigning?  The Onion has been one of the most consistent voices on Syria for months.  —  WASHINGTON — Though The Onion is a satirical newspaper, its Syria coverage in the past few months has been anything but …
Ben Popper / The Verge:
HuffPost Live laying off staff and shuttering LA office as it expands internationally  —  According to several sources familiar with the matter, HuffPost Live will be laying off around 20 staffer from its Los Angeles office, not counting stagehands, cutbacks that will essentially shutter the LA outpost.
Al Jazeera English:
Al Jazeera journalists detained in Egypt  —  Four-man team arrested on Tuesday, while two other staff members have been held for several weeks.  —  Al Jazeera correspondent Wayne Hay, cameraman Adil Bradlow, producers Russ Finn and Baher Mohammed are currently being detained by Egyptian authorities.
Mark Walsh / MediaPost:
Tumblr's Coatney Joins Al Jazeera America  —  Al Jazeera America today announced former Tumblr media director Mark Coatney has been named the channel's first SVP, digital media.  In that role, he'll oversee the network's Web site and be the “senior decision maker” for all things digital, according to a spokesperson.
Alex Kantrowitz / AdAge:
Gawker Tries Native Ads in Comments, With Help From Bill Nye  —  The science guy will take your questions, on behalf of State Farm  —  Sometime next Wednesday, celebrity scientist Bill Nye will take a seat in front of a computer and invite the internet to ask him whatever it wants.
Discussion: Nieman Journalism Lab
Dan Trombetto / Folio:
Esquire's Paywall Experiment  —  Behind the brand's latest attempt at paid content.  —  Esquire made big news in the world of paid Web content in July, putting one of its magazine features behind a paywall.  “The Prophet”—for sale on Esquire.com for $1.99—wasn't the title's first experience with a paywall though.
Ken Yeung / The Next Web:
Automattic takes on Storify with WordPress Media Explorer for curating tweets and YouTube videos  —  Automattic has released a Media Explorer tool for the WordPress blogging platform that lets authors curate trending content from Twitter and YouTube all without needing to leave their post.
Farhad Manjoo / Slate:
Silicon Valley's richest people: Why they're the target of Gawker Media's Valleywag  —  That's Valleywag's editorial vision in a nutshell, but it could be so much more.  —  It was a day that ends in Y, so last week Sam Biddle, editor of Gawker's tech-gossip site Valleywag, decided to post a quick hit on Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer.
Jane Darby Menton / Yale Daily News:
Woodward to teach ‘Journalism’  —  In the spring, aspiring Yale journalists will have the opportunity to learn from one of the most famous names in the field, Bob Woodward '65.  —  Woodward will teach the spring section of “Journalism,” an intensive seminar that the English Department offers each spring and fall.
Discussion: @abeaujon and @froomkin
Chris Morran / Consumerist:
Will Football Finally Bring An End To Time Warner Cable/CBS Standoff?  —  For 3 million Time Warner Cable customers in New York City, L.A., Dallas, and a few other pockets around the country, it's been almost four weeks since the cable company pulled CBS and Showtime from its lineup over the latest stupid fee dispute.
Sarah Laskow / Columbia Journalism Review:
The lawyers hackers call  —  Tor Ekeland works out of the smallest office I've ever seen, in the kind of Brooklyn coworking space where a guy is inexplicably asleep in the common area at 2:30 in the afternoon.  The office has three chairs and glass walls and is not much wider than the doorway.
Reuters:
Univision adds reporters, comedians to new cable network Fusion  —  U.S. Spanish language broadcaster Univision is ramping up Fusion, its new English cable news network aimed at younger viewers, hiring hundreds of staffers as it prepares to enter the crowded cable market.
Terry Heaton / Street Fight:
Joe Trippi: Local TV's Biennial Political Cash Bonanza Is Going to Fall Off a Cliff  —  If there was one thing that newspapers could count on to keep their margins high while serving as a buffer against potential problems, it was classified advertising.  This automatic and assumed cash cow …
Ian Jolly / College of Journalism feed:
Is the BBC getting caught in the transatlantic drift?  —  The BBC may be an international broadcaster - and indeed communicates in many languages through the World Service - but its use of English is among the things most likely to generate audience discontent.
Dante D'Orazio / The Verge:
Instapaper gets complete redesign after Betaworks purchase, new mobile apps soon  —  Instapaper is in the midsts of an overhaul.  After being purchased by Betaworks this past April, the first major changes to the read-it-later service since creator Marco Arment gave up control of the app are here.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Spotify Gets a New Biz Dev Head From 21st Century Fox  —  Spotify has hired a new dealmaker: The streaming music service has hired Jorge Espinel, who has spent the last four years working on digital strategy at News Corp and 21st Century Fox, as its new head of global business development.
Discussion: CNET, Softpedia News and hypebot
David Kravets / Wired:
White House Copyright Czar Jumps to Industry Anti-Piracy Group  —  Victoria Espinel, the nation's copyright czar until two weeks ago, has been named president of an anti-piracy trade group that lobbies governments on behalf of the software industry.  —  Espinel resigned earlier this month …
Freddie Laker / VentureBeat:
Smart TV security: When TV watches you  —  Freddie Laker is the founder and CEO of Guide.  —  If you've ever watched a television show aimed at children, you'll notice that the characters often break the fourth wall to interact with their pint-sized audiences.
Kelly McBride / Poynter:
What the ESPN/Frontline breakup teaches us about investigative reporting  —  As we put the pieces together in this week's ESPN/Frontline breakup, we've learned something about investigative journalism: it's incredibly difficult for a news organization to hold its own partners accountable.
Discussion: @poynter and @kellymcb
 
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 More News: 
Alexander Nazaryan / The Atlantic Wire:
Bad News: When Journalism and Business Collide
Discussion: @kirstensalyer
Guardian:
BBC's head of human resources accused of ‘corporate fraud and cronyism’ quits
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Advocate may add third ‘distinct paper’ in Louisiana
Discussion: Baton Rouge news …
Guardian:
Sun on Sunday overhaul expected in September
Discussion: @benfenton and The Drum
The Express Tribune:
New York Times website restored after hacker attack
 Earlier Picks: 
Cameron Tung / The New Yorker Blog:
How Podcasts Conquered Comedy
Stijn Debrouwere / stdout.be:
Cargo cult analytics
Dieter Bohn / The Verge:
Verizon Wireless again working on deal to break free of Vodafone, says WSJ
Lucas Shaw / The Wrap:
Press+ Launches a Service to Make Online Video Profitable (Exclusive)
Discussion: Folio and paidContent
 

 
From Techmeme:

Richard Lawler / The Verge:
Okta fixes a flaw present since July 23, 2024 that, under specific conditions, let users log in with any password if the account's username had 52+ characters

Chance Miller / 9to5Mac:
Popular photo editing company Pixelmator says it has signed an agreement to be acquired by Apple, pending regulatory approval

Jeffrey Dastin / Reuters:
Intel scraps forecast of selling $500M+ worth of Gaudi AI accelerator chips in 2024, with CEO Pat Gelsinger citing chip transition and slower uptake to software

 
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