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10:35 PM ET, November 5, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
TV Investments Drag on 21st Century Fox Profits  —  In its first three months as a separate company, 21st Century Fox produced revenue that surpassed analysts' expectations, but its profit came in slightly below expectations, reflecting the company's investments in new programming that it says will pay off over the long term.
Bill Carter / New York Times:
CBS News Defends Its ‘60 Minutes’ Benghazi Report  —  CBS News, under fire from critics who dispute details in a “60 Minutes” report on the Benghazi attacks last year that was broadcast on Oct. 27, aggressively defended the report's accuracy on Tuesday and the account of its main interview subject.
Joshua Goldman / CNET:
Streamnation expands to streaming, sharing your movie, TV show collections  —  The service that's built for storing, streaming, and sharing your photos and videos is now looking to become a streaming media hub.  —  Remember when you used to let friends and family borrow a DVD?
Joan E. Solsman / CNET:
AOL's big Adap.tv buy ignites sales, but it whiffs on profit  —  If you ask AOL, the third quarter was all about revenue, revenue, revenue — never mind that big miss on profit.  In the latest three-month period, the online media company grew advertising dollars at double the rate it did the quarter before …
RELATED:
Reuters:
AOL ad sales rise, but Patch weighs on profit
Andrew Kaczynski / BuzzFeed:
Washington Times Ends Rand Paul's Column After Plagiarism  —  Paul had written hundreds of articles for the paper.  —  Mark Wilson / Getty Images  —  The conservative Washington D.C. newspaper The Washington Times announced Tuesday it is ending Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul's column …
Allan Sloan / Fortune:
How being a tax dummy cost The New York Times $60M  —  A mistake made 20 years ago cost the Times big during the sale of The Boston Globe.  —  The New York Times Co's (NYT) purchase of The Boston Globe for more than $1 billion twenty years ago has turned out to be among the worst single newspaper acquisitions in history.
Deadline.com:
Deadline.com And Nikki Finke Parting Ways  —  Despite attempts by all to have it go otherwise, Nikki Finke will no longer be leading Deadline Hollywood, and she will not be writing weekend box office or filing stories going forward.  This is an emotional and painful parting of the ways for us.
Erik Sass / MediaPost:
AP Taps MediaVoice For Native Ads  —  The Associated Press is bringing native advertising to its Web site, mobile site and mobile app in partnership with Polar, which operates a native advertising platform for digital publishers called MediaVoice.  —  The deal allows the AP to deliver native ads …
Brendan Sasso / The Hill:
New FCC chief orders review of agency procedures  —  Tom Wheeler, the new chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, has ordered a review of how his agency crafts and enforces regulations.  —  The review, announced one day after Wheeler was sworn into office, is a nod to legislation …
Lucas Shaw / The Wrap:
Netflix Gets Back Into the Movie Business: Big Deal, Little Deal or No Deal?  —  Netflix is back in the movie business after picking up exclusive distribution rights to “The Square,” Jehane Noujaim's award-winning documentary about recent political tumult in Egypt.
Discussion: Broadcasting & Cable and CNET
Kara Swisher / AllThingsD:
Yahoo's Mayer in talks with Ryan Seacrest about creating original content  —  Yahoo's Mayer Now Chit-Chatting With Ryan Seacrest About Content Ideas  —  Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer is tearing her way through the content celebrities, it seems.  —  First, news star Katie Couric.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Is AOL Finally Making Money From Content?  Maybe!  —  One of the perennially weird things about AOL is that it's a content company that doesn't make money from content: All of its actual profit has come from subscribers to its old Internet-access business, which still has 2.5 million customers,* who pay $20 a month to get online.
Matthew Cooper / NationalJournal.com:
Fred Hiatt Offered to Quit Jeff Bezos's Washington Post  —  Jeff Bezos has yet to truly make a mark on his latest acquisition, The Washington Post.  In some ways, that shouldn't be a surprise: The deal closed only a month ago.  But that doesn't mean that there hasn't been some potential for a shake-up.
Discussion: FishbowlDC
 
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 More News: 
Jeff Baumgartner / Broadcasting & Cable:
Charter Launches TV Streaming App
Discussion: AllThingsD
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Col Allan is gone, again, from the ‘Post’ newsroom
Janko Roettgers / Gigaom:
Cox plans to launch internet TV service
Discussion: Light Reading
 Earlier Picks: 
Michael O'Connell / Hollywood Reporter:
TV Ratings: CNN Suffers Worst Week Under Jeff Zucker
Michael Depp / NetNewsCheck Latest:
Lee Enterprises Readies For Mobile Future
Discussion: @niemanlab
David Zax / Fast Company:
An Article Has A Lifespan Of 37 Days, And Other Findings From Pocket
Discussion: @zimbalist, Beyond Search and FishbowlNY, Thanks:@steverubel