Check out Mini-Mediagazer for simple mobiles or Mediagazer Mobile for modern smartphones.
1:35 PM ET, November 16, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Sari Horwitz / Washington Post:
Greenwald won't be prosecuted based on current information, U.S. attorney general says  —  Justice is reviewing criminal cases that used surveillance evidence gathered under FISA  —  The Justice Department is conducting a comprehensive review of all criminal cases in which the government …
RELATED:
emptywheel:
The Second Page, Glenn Greenwald Edition  —  On the first page of a WaPo story on an Eric Holder speech, it says this.  Holder indicated that the Justice Department is not planning to prosecute former Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald, one of the journalists who received documents from Snowden …
Discussion: @dangillmor
Philip Bump / The Atlantic Wire:
Eric Holder May Have Just Toppled the First Domino in Ending NSA Surveillance  —  The top line news from an interview Attorney General Eric Holder gave to The Washington Post is that Holder recognizes Glenn Greenwald's work in exposing NSA — and Justice Department — surveillance as journalism and that he wouldn't be prosecuted.
Discussion: Guardian
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Bloomberg boots ‘China leak’ scribe  —  Bloomberg L.P. has put a reporter suspected of leaking news about a controversial China story on unpaid leave, The Post has learned.  —  Michael Forsthye was escorted from Bloomberg's Hong Kong office on Nov. 14, sources said, after he was fingered …
Felix Salmon:
The financial-media rollup strategy  —  Financial news is a classic ripe-for-disruption industry.  It generally makes its money by selling expensive subscriptions to the price-insensitive, but that model won't last forever: it's never been harder to find anybody under the age of 40 who pays for such things.
RELATED:
Bloomberg:
Forbes Media Is Working With Bankers to Sell Company
Matthew Lynch / Capital New York:
Forbes staff receives memo confirming company is ‘[testing] the waters regarding a sale’
Jack Shafer:
Does anyone still work at the ‘New York Times’?  —  Recent defections of talent from the New York Times — Nate Silver, David Pogue, Jeff Zeleny, Richard Berke, Brian Stelter, Matt Bai, et al. — have unjelled the media firmament, according to Politico media columnist Dylan Byers.
Stacey Higginbotham / Gigaom:
The shifting pay TV industry in two charts  —  More than half of consumers with a connected TV have increased their use of over-the-top broadband TV sources in the last year, with 24 percent reporting a sizable increase according to data from the TDG Group.  This television includes sources …
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
What if Contently bought ProPublica?  —  That's a crazy question.  It sounds stupid.  It may be stupid.  —  In fact, let me just go ahead and pre-package a tweet for those among us who have their outrage-phasers set to Reflex: … But bear with me.  There might not yet be a serious case …
Discussion: @traviskorte and @dicktofel
Ryan Chittum / Columbia Journalism Review:
The annual press flubbing of Thanksgiving dinner  —  Journalists find a way to mishandle a yearly farm bureau press release  —  Come this time of year, the business press gets a press release from the American Farm Bureau Federation reporting how much the average Thanksgiving dinner will run you this year.
Austin Carr / Co.Design:
How Flipboard Keeps You Glued To The Page  —  Several years ago, Flipboard CEO Mike McCue was searching for the company's soul.  He and cofounder Evan Doll had been playing with the idea of a magazine app for the age of the iPad, but they hadn't yet stumbled on the concept of making it personalized and social.
Discussion: @noahr
Stephanie M. Lee / San Francisco Chronicle:
Raul Ramirez, pioneering journalist, dies at 67  —  Raul Ramirez, whose tough-nosed reporting and inspiring mentorship made him a defining force in Bay Area journalism, died Friday at his Berkeley home.  He was 67.  Mr. Ramirez's death was announced by KQED Public Radio, where he had worked for 22 years.
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
Hacktivist Jeremy Hammond Gets 10 Years In Prison; Explains How FBI Gave Him The Targets To Hack  —  We wrote, earlier this year, about LulzSec/Antisec/Anonymous hacktivist Jeremy Hammond pleading guilty to hacking Stratfor.  While the other Lulzsec hackers who were arrested in the UK got sentences …
RELATED:
Ed Pilkington / Guardian:
Jailed Anonymous hacker Jeremy Hammond: ‘My days of hacking are done’
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of Mediagazer at 1:35 PM ET, November 16, 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: 
Ellie Hall / BuzzFeed:
Alec Baldwin Suspended From MSNBC After Controversial Remarks
Kyle Ellis / SND:
San Francisco Chronicle goes Gotham City for Batkid
Arti Patel / Folio:
Businessweek Drops Biggest Issue Since 1999
Discussion: Business Wire and Talking Biz News
Corey Hutchins / Columbia Journalism Review:
Election reporting lessons from @redistrict, a Twitter-savvy analyst at Cook Political Report
 Earlier Picks: 
Jason Clampet / Skift:
Pinterest Will Launch a Travel Channel to Push Users from Inspiration to Booking
Discussion: @barryschnitt and WebProNews
Michael Rondon / Folio:
The Atlantic, Reddit Partner on AMA Series
Cynthia Littleton / Variety:
‘The Simpsons’ Lands $750 Mil Cable, VOD Syndication Pact with FXX