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3:55 PM ET, March 24, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Damon Kiesow / Poynter:
The New York Times subscription plan doesn't protect print, it promotes the mobile Web  —  The New York Times' new digital subscription pricing has been characterized by some as a backward-looking effort to protect print revenue.  But after comparing the Times' subscription prices …
RELATED:
Nate Silver / FiveThirtyEight:
A Note to Our Readers on the Times Pay Model and the Economics of Reporting
Discussion: CNN
Leslie Horn / PC Magazine:   Q&A: The Person Who Demolished the Times Paywall Via Twitter
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Brill, Crovitz & Co. Sell Journalism Online To RR Donnelly  —  That was fast.  Just shy of two years after launch, Steve Brill, Gordon Crovitz and Leo Hindery Jr. have sold their “make journalism pay” business to someone who already makes money from publishing.
Kunur Patel / AdAge:
McClatchy, a Groupon Partner, Starts Selling Its Own Daily Deals, Too  —  Will Still Use Groupon, but Becomes Latest Publisher to Try Social Coupon Game for Itself  —  After teaming up with Groupon to get daily deals on its websites last summer, McClatchy Co. has decided to also get into the business on its own.
Robert Andrews / paidContent:UK:
Google Is Not About To Become A Magazine Publisher  —  With chatter like a YouTube (NSDQ: GOOG) investment in original content, one could be forgiven for wondering if Google's declaration - that it's a technology, not a media company - is slipping.  —  But its launch of a new magazine …
Discussion: Guardian
RELATED:
Frederic Lardinois / NewsGrange:
Think Quarterly: Google Launches Its Own Online Magazine (Updated)
Lance Knobel / Davos Newbies:
Google listens... if you shout loudly enough  —  Yesterday evening I wrote about the bizarre disappearance from Google News of my news site, Berkeleyside.  What happens next is either an illustration of the power of digital democracy or an example of the value of friends with fantastic megaphones.
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
RELATED:
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Google News de-indexing Berkleyside: Bug, not snub!
Discussion: Davos Newbies
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
'I'm just mystified that this little job post has resonated with so many people in the business'  —  Sarasota Herald-Tribune's Matthew Doig has written what Mother Jones calls “the best journalism-job want ad ever.”  His search for an investigative reporter is all over Twitter and journalists' Facebook pages.
Sam Gustin / Wired.com:
Google Books Deal Not Dead, Only Resting, Authors' Lawyer Says  —  U.S. Circuit Court Judge Denny Chin's rejection of Google's legal settlement with authors and publishers was not only a setback for the search giant's plans to digitize and make available 10 million books, but also for the dream of a universal online library.
Discussion: O'Reilly Radar and TeleRead
RELATED:
Joe Mullin / paidContent:
What The Collapse Of The Google Books Deal Really Means
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of Sunday paper/tablet subscriptions  —  Editor's Note: Each week, Ken Doctor — author of Newsonomics and longtime watcher of the business side of digital news — writes about the economics of news for the Lab.  —  Digital news business models are playing out on pool tables these days.
Discussion: Editors Weblog
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Cordray Exits Hearst Magazines For Pitney Bowes' Volly  —  After five years as one of the top digital executives at Hearst Magazines, Chuck Cordray is leaving the company to become president of Pitney Bowes' recently formed Volly.  The new entity, which debuted in January, is described as a …
Discussion: FishbowlNY and MediaMemo
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
Writer's disclosure: I used to buy pot from my story subject  —  Van Smith's story about Reptilian Records owner Christopher Neu pleading guilty to drug charges includes this passage in the 14th paragraph: … Romenesko asked Smith about bringing up his pot days.  His response:
Irina Slutsky / AdAge:
Facebook Test Mines Real-Time Conversations for Ad Targeting  —  Offering Marketers the Ability to Target Swells of Sentiment, Much Like Twitter  —  This month — and for the first time ever — Facebook started to mine real-time conversations to target ads.
The Atlantic Wire:
Mark Armstrong: What I Read  —  How do other people deal with the torrent of information that pours down on us all?  Do they have some secret?  Perhaps.  We are asking various people who seem well-informed to describe their media diets.  This is from a conversation with Mark Armstrong …
Todd Bishop / GeekWire:
Starbucks network adds ESPN, Economist, Marvel  —  ESPN Rumor Central on the Starbucks Digital Network  —  Digital subscriptions to the Economist aren't cheap, but temporary online access to the magazine's contents just dropped to the price of a cup of coffee, and a trip to the nearest Starbucks store.
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Sulia Helps Twitter Sort the Tweet From the Chaff  —  There's a lot of great stuff on Twitter.  And there's a lot more lousy stuff.  —  Sorting out the good from the lousy-or at least the OK from the spam-is an important task Twitter hasn't figured out how to do on its own yet.
Jonathan Berr / DailyFinance:
Guess Who's Making Money?  NPR  —  NPR expects to make a profit this year, a surprising state of affairs for a nonprofit.  But with the national debate raging about whether the federal government should stop funding public broadcasting, could NPR find itself a victim of its own success?
Discussion: Poynter
Marc Karimzadeh / WWD:
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
YouTube Now Helps You Make Movies...Without A Camera  —  By now you're undoubtedly familiar with the incredible amount of footage that's uploaded to YouTube — the current count is 35 hours of video uploaded every minute.  And with video cameras integrated into smartphones, tablets …
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
AOL HuffPost To Freelancers: We Want You On Staff, But Real Journalists Only Need Apply  —  In the reorganization of AOL and the Huffington Post into the Huffington Post Media Group, the company succumbed to layoffs and consolidated AOL news sites into the Huffington Post, folding or shutting down thirty properties.
RELATED:
Capital New York:
Huffington's cultural revolution: Destroying the old world to forge a new one, for a while
Discussion: MediaPost, Poynter and Runnin' Scared
 
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 More News: 
Robert MacMillan:
Calling people at home for a story? You heathen!
Discussion: Talking Biz News
Gail Shister / TVNewser:
‘I know the difference between journalism and a slogan. Keeping them honest is a slogan.’
Discussion: New York Magazine and Poynter
Jessica Ocheltree / splicetoday.com:
The Half-Lives of Media Alarmism
Yahoo! News:
Ongo looks to capture US news online
OnSwipe Company Blog:
Onswipe Partners With Automattic To Power iPad Traffic On 18.6 Million+ WordPress.com Blogs
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
New York Times' Frank Bruni shares his tools for versatile writing
Discussion: FishbowlNY
 Earlier Picks: 
Robert Hernandez / Online Journalism Review:
Q & A with Overheard in the Newsroom's Kevin Cobb
Kat Stoeffel / New York Observer:
Being Mrs. Keller  —  Sometimes it's convenient to have a newsroom at your fingertips.
Discussion: Future of Journalism
Kelly McBride / ESPN:
Straight to the point  —  Poynter Review Project aims …
Simon Owens / Nieman Journalism Lab:
How CNN's iReport enhanced the network's coverage of the Japan earthquake and its aftermath
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Bloomberg: Personalizing the News for 20 Million People
Discussion: eMedia Vitals