Top News:
The Huffington Post UK:
British Newspaper Editors Described As ‘Angry Donkeys’ By Former Sun Boss David Yelland — David Cameron, Polls, Fraser Nelson, THE SUN NEWSPAPER, UK Media, UK Politics, David Yelland, Leveson Inquiry, UK NEWS, UK News — The former editor of one of Britain's most powerful newspapers …
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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.
Discussion:
Press Gazette, Guardian, Spectator, @paul__johnson, BelfastTelegraph.co.uk, BBC, Guardian and Guardian
Andreas Whittam Smith / The Independent:
How the Leveson Report stopped the press in its tracks: One year on, the forensic cataloguing of media bullying retains its power to shock — It's a year since Lord Justice Leveson delivered his verdict on British newspapers. The implications are still sinking in, says Andreas Whittam Smith
Discussion:
@nujbelfast and @mscott
Mathew Ingram / Gigaom:
Lessons from journalism startup Matter: Paywalls make growing readership difficult — When journalism startup Matter launched a year ago, it was one of the most highly-funded media projects on Kickstarter, having pulled in more than $140,000 in donations — almost three times what it initially set out to raise.
Discussion:
Medium, @raju, @stevebuttry and Poynter
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.
Thanks:@steverubel
Andy / TorrentFreak:
Paris court orders Google, Microsoft and Yahoo to remove 16 video streaming sites from search — Court Orders Google, Microsoft & Yahoo to Make Pirate Sites Disappear — Last week turned out to be yet another hectic seven days for the copyright enforcement obligations of Google.
Discussion:
@stacyherbert
Maggie Michael / Associated Press:
Egypt arrests prominent blogger Alaa Abdel-Fattah under new anti-protest law — CAIRO — Egyptian security forces arrested a prominent political activist Thursday night over inciting a demonstration in defiance of a new law heavily restricting protests in the country, his family said.
Discussion:
@salmasaid, Middle East, Associated Press and BBC
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Harding hires former Times deputy as managing editor of BBC news — Keith Blackmore was deputy editor of Times under Harding, who has also hired Jonathan Munro of ITV News — James Harding has hired his former Times deputy, Keith Blackmore, to be managing editor of BBC news and current affairs.
Discussion:
broadcastnow.co.uk
Elsa Keslassy / Variety:
Why Netflix Would Face Resistance Breaking Into France — The market reportedly ripe for the streaming service's next invasion boasts huge barriers to entry — A nation packed with cinephiles and avid consumers of U.S. drama imports, France seems like a natural fit for a service like Netflix.
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
BT to add music service to TV offerings — Music streaming and karaoke offering backed by Universal Music — BT is to launch a music streaming and karaoke service backed by the world's largest music company, Universal Music. — The service will initially offer the equivalent …
Discussion:
Financial Times, NME, Music Ally, Music Week and Variety
Matt Katz / Politico:
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close — “How'd you draw the short end of the stick?” Chris Christie asked me the first time I walked into his office for an interview. — By this point in early 2011, Christie was barely a year into his New Jersey governorship, and I'd been covering him for just six weeks.
Discussion:
@zekejmiller and @mollyesque
John Plunkett / Guardian:
'BBC should open more shows up to indies if it doesn't subsidise Channel 4' — Up to 75% of BBC's shows should be available to independent sector if it wants to defend licence fee, says All3Media chairman — All3Media chairman Steve Morrison has said the BBC should make up to 75% …
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John Plunkett / Guardian:
BBC chief wants corporation to be ‘less British’ defending the licence fee
BBC chief wants corporation to be ‘less British’ defending the licence fee
Discussion:
@toddlerlex, @jamescridland and bbc.co.uk
Paul Steiger / ProPublica:
Why Reporters in the U.S. Now Need Protection — Last night, ProPublica founder and executive chairman Paul Steiger received the Burton Benjamin Memorial award from the Committee to Protect Journalists. Here are his remarks. — In recent days I thought a lot about the 16 previous recipients …
Discussion:
Poynter, @florianklenk, @rantaramic, @raju, @franklomonte, @jcstearns and @davidbarstow