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3:55 PM ET, November 29, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
100 leading figures urge newspaper publishers to accept royal charter  —  More than 100 prominent people from literature, the arts, science, academia, human rights and the law have signed a declaration urging newspaper and magazine publishers to embrace the royal charter system of press regulation.
RELATED:
The Huffington Post UK:   British Newspaper Editors Described As ‘Angry Donkeys’ By Former Sun Boss David Yelland
Andreas Whittam Smith / The Independent:
How the Leveson Report stopped the press in its tracks: One year on, the forensic cataloguing …
Discussion: @nujbelfast and @mscott
Mathew Ingram / Gigaom:
This online journalism startup raised $1.7M in crowdfunding and you've never heard of it  —  We've been writing a lot lately about online journalism startups like Matter — which was acquired by Medium and just dropped its paywall — and NSFW Corp., the Vegas-based venture that just merged with Pando Daily.
Discussion: The Next Web
Human Rights Watch:
Iraq: Wave of Journalist Killings  —  Security Forces Fail to Investigate, but Arrest Reporters for Defamation  —  (Baghdad) - Four journalists have been assassinated in Mosul, the capital of Iraq's Ninewa Province, since early October 2013.  Iraqi security officials have said they were investigating …
Jack Shafer:
If Katie Couric is the answer, what's the question?  —  Web publishing — never a diffident business — has been calling attention to itself all week long.  Yahoo chief executive officer Marissa Mayer, whose forte as boss has been the shimmering acquisition (Summly, Tumblr, Xobni, Rockmelt …
Edward Wong / New York Times:
Bloomberg Code Keeps Articles From Chinese Eyes  —  In early 2011, during a period of heightened tension between the Chinese government and foreign journalists, Bloomberg News created coding to give editors the ability to categorize stories under a new class, called 204.
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Time Inc. to ‘dramatically’ expand native ad business  —  Time Inc. is going native.  —  CEO Joe Ripp plans to “dramatically” expand into the so-called native ad business and has issued a request for proposals to find a partner that will help scale up new native ads on a wide variety of platforms.
Robert Andrews / Beet.TV:
The Guardian Now More Popular In US Than UK  —  LONDON — It started out as The Manchester Guardian in 1821 and had since become a national newspaper.  But, this fall, The Guardian crossed another geographical rubicon - it became more popular in the US than its native UK.
Discussion: @moorehn and @jimpoco, Thanks:@steverubel
Nikki Usher / Nieman Journalism Lab:
At The Miami Herald, maybe newsroom place still matters  —  When The Miami Herald left its home on Biscayne Bay, many in the newsroom were wistful.  The newsroom had been right in the heart of downtown and home to memories and legends.  Two movies had been shot in the building: Absence of Malice …
Arif Durrani / Media Week:
Metro MD Linda Grant leaves amid group restructure  —  Linda Grant, the managing director of Metro newspaper, is set to leave the business she has led for nearly three years tomorrow, as part of a wider restructure.  —  Linda Grant: ‘I am immensely proud of all that we have achieved’
Discussion: Guardian and Brand Republic
Jon Blistein / Rolling Stone:
Lady Gaga Documents ‘Do What U Want’ in ‘BitTorrent Bundle’  —  Project with ‘Vice’ includes making-of photos and video  —  The video for Lady Gaga and R. Kelly's duet “Do What U Want,” which appears on the former's new record Artpop, will see release on December 3rd through a unique …
Discussion: Entertainmentwise, TechHive and NME
Chad Bray / DealBook:
Pearson to Sell Financial News Group for $623 Million  —  LONDON — Funds affiliated with the private-equity firm BC Partners have reached an agreement to acquire Mergermarket Group from the British publisher Pearson for 382 million pounds, or about $622.7 million.
Andrew Zajac / Bloomberg:
Apple Objects to Monitor's Fees in E-Books Antitrust Case  —  Apple Inc. said a monitor appointed by a judge to oversee antitrust compliance in its electronic books price-fixing case is charging too much money.  —  “Of all all known past Apple matters,” no lawyer has had a higher rate …
 
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 More News: 
Rachel Bartlett / Journalism.co.uk:
How AP builds deep-dive Explore pages from the archives
Discussion: @raju
Maggie Michael / Associated Press:
Egypt arrests prominent blogger Alaa Abdel-Fattah under new anti-protest law
Discussion: @salmasaid, Middle East and BBC
Elsa Keslassy / Variety:
Why Netflix Would Face Resistance Breaking Into France
Matt Katz / Politico:
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
Discussion: @mollyesque and @zekejmiller
 Earlier Picks: 
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Harding hires former Times deputy as managing editor of BBC news
Discussion: broadcastnow.co.uk
Mathew Ingram / Gigaom:
Lessons from journalism startup Matter: Paywalls make growing readership difficult