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Romenesko

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Jim Romenesko
Your daily fix of media industry news, commentary, and memos.
WSJ.com
aplogo
The AP and Google have been negotiating a new licensing agreement to continue the publication of AP content on Google News. In late December, Google stopped adding new AP articles to its site.
> CNN goes a week without using AP stories or images
Posted at 7:21 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Updated at
7:18 p.m.

Subscriber cancels because paper is delivered
During snowstorm.
(John Robinson)

Listen to NPR ombud Shepard
On WAMU show.
(Kojo Nnamdi)

Times-Picayune's Monday paper
Over a half-million sold.
(NOLA.com)

News Journal evacuated
After small fire breaks out.
(Delaware Online)

SI Swimsuit Issue
A billion-dollar franchise.
(MarketWatch)

POSTED FRIDAY
Harper's web editor
Chats with Choire Sicha.
(TheAwl.com)

USAT's "Smokestack Effect" wins again
Gets Oakes Award
(CJR.org)

LEFT RAIL ARCHIVE

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POPULAR TOPICS


Feb. 9, 2010

Judge: No social networking in Baltimore courthouses
BaltimoreSun.com
A judge has banned "the use of any device to transmit information on Twitter, Facebook, Linked In or any other current or future form of social networking from any of the courthouses within the Circuit Court for Baltimore City." The Sun's Andy Green says the order is predicated on the assumption that posting to Twitter is effectively the same as having cameras broadcast court proceedings. "That analogy is false," he writes.
Posted at 4:15 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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"Once again, the New York Times is dipping into our deep pool of talent"
Boston Phoenix
Boston Globe arts editor Scott Heller is joining the Times as assistant arts editor, overseeing theater and books. "In taking a position in New York, Scott will be moving closer to his family, a goal of his for some time," says a memo to the Globe staff.
Posted at 2:56 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Pruitt: "We don't need to be the strongest to survive"
paidContent.org
mcclatchy
"We just need to be able to adapt, and that's something we've proven we can do," McClatchy CEO Gary Pruitt said at Borrell Associates' Local Online Advertising Conference. || More from Editor & Publisher and TheNextWeb.com.
Posted at 2:50 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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WH reporters are whining? No story there!
Slate
Jack Shafer didn't think much of Howard Kurtz's Monday piece about White House reporters feeling bypassed by the Obama administration. "Here's the story Kurtz missed: The White House press corps is, always has been, and always will be a gang of miserable, whining whiners. Like other guilds, they excel at bellyaching when their privileges are canceled -- or even when they think their privileges are in the process of being canceled. .... They exist to be bypassed!
> Obama makes surprise stop in WH briefing room
Posted at 2:13 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Virginian-Pilot sports staff feels "awful" about incorrect Super Bowl score, says editor
Virginian-Pilot
"It was, as simply as I can put it, human error," says Denis Finley. "It's hard to believe we can make a mistake like this when at least a half-dozen veteran journalists were involved in producing Monday's Sports section. It's hard to believe we can mess up what is arguably the biggest sporting event of the year, but we did."
> Earlier: Paper apologizes for Super Bowl score mistake
Posted at 1:44 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Hoge to step down as Foreign Affairs editor at end of 2010
Romenesko Misc
James F. Hoge Jr. is leaving Foreign Affairs after nearly two decades to pursue new opportunities in communications and international affairs. He'll chair Human Rights Watch, starting in October, work with an international consulting firm, and teach at New York University's Center for Global Affairs.

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Posted at 1:20 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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A lot of people claim they watch "NewsHour," but....
Daily Texan Online
Newsweek editor Jon Meacham was asked at a Texas Monthly event how to get the news media to return to delivering intelligent news. He used PBS's "NewsHour" an example, and said if the number of people who claim to watch the program actually did watch it, the show would have much higher ratings. "It's fundamentally a supply-and-demand problem. There’s an infinite demand for something and a limited supply for intelligent something."
Posted at 12:02 PM on Feb. 9, 2010
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"The Chronicle's not closing down anytime soon"
SFGate.com
sfchron
"I don't say that because I make the decisions, that's just my belief and my observation," says former San Francisco Chronicle executive editor Phil Bronstein. "I want to make that clear. And anything I tell you could be completely wrong or change tomorrow."
Posted at 11:03 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Why did Goldman Sachs use Huffington Post to respond to NYT?
True/Slant | Reuters.com
"Why doesn't it tackle the Times on its home court [and] buy ads in the business section to tell its side of the story?" writes Claudia Deutsch. "A muddled PR response in the Huffington Post seems way below the fight-back level I've come to expect from the Bad Boys of Wall Street." || Felix Salmon: What Goldman did was very smart.
Posted at 10:39 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Morningstar acquires Footnoted for undisclosed sum
Footnoted.org || Morningstar release Michelle Leder, who founded Footnoted.org in 2003, goes over SEC filings to find information buried in the fine print, such as evidence of aggressive accounting and excessive compensation. || Read the release. || See Footnoted items that have been posted on Romenesko.
Posted at 10:02 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Schieffer donates memorabilia to TCU's j-school
Daily Skiff
schieffer
Bob Schieffer's press passes that date back to the 1960s, and his reporting notebooks from Vietnam are among the items being displayed in the Schieffer School of Journalism Seminar Room at Texas Christian University. The CBS News veteran "really only had one condition about the memorabilia, and that was that we did not erect a museum," says j-school director John Lumpkin. || Star-Telegram: Schieffer talks about broadcast news changes.
Posted at 9:35 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Ad pays tribute to Star Tribune staffers who've left the paper
MinnPost.com
The ad -- paid for by newsroom employees -- is on A5 in today's Star Tribune. It notes that the paper has cut its workforce by 1,000 employees since 2007. The newsroom lost 140 staffers in that time.
Posted at 9:02 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Increasingly, we're seeing reporters use Twitter to broadcast single-sourced stories
McGuire on Media | True/Slant
"Worse, other tweeters then follow these single-sourced tweets," notes Tim McGuire. "Just because there is now a tool that allows us to regurgitate everything we hear when we hear it does not mean that's good journalism." || Related from Michael Hastings.
Posted at 8:42 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Missouri editor: My staff has changed since covering council meeting murders two years ago
"On the Media"
"There's not the same enthusiasm for the big story," says Webster-Kirkwood Times editor Don Corrigan, who had a reporter witness the shootings at a city council meeting two years ago. "We just recently had another workplace shooting here in St. Louis -- three were killed, five were injured -- and nobody wanted to really take on that assignment." || More "OTM" audio and transcripts.
Posted at 8:22 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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People prefer e-mailing articles with positive rather than negative themes
New York Times
email
They also like to send long articles on intellectually challenging topics, according to two University of Pennsylvania researchers. "Perhaps most of all, readers wanted to share articles that inspired awe, an emotion that the researchers investigated after noticing how many science articles made the list," writes John Tierney.
Posted at 8:01 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Shafer finds more examples of plagiarism by Posner
Slate
Daily Beast investigative reporter Gerald Posner lifted from Texas Lawyer, a Miami Herald blog, a Miami Herald editorial, a Miami Herald article, and a health care journalism blog, according to Jack Shafer. The Daily Beast has suspended Posner while it reviews his articles.
Posted at 7:39 AM on Feb. 9, 2010
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Feb. 8, 2010

NYT urged to "stop the drama and psychological warfare" against Paterson
New York Observer
paterson
"If the New York Times is working on or has a story [about New York Gov. David Paterson], then you should confirm or print it," GOP gubernatorial candidate Rick Lazio writes to Times executive editor Bill Keller. "If you do not, then you have a moral obligation to stop the drama and the psychological warfare on Governor Paterson."
> NYT's Paterson expose said to be PG-13, not X-rated
> WPIX: Paterson to answer NYT's questions tomorrow
Posted at 4:59 PM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Times-Picayune presses are still going, says editor
Editor & Publisher
"We are trying to satisfy a demand which doesn't seem to slack," says Jim Amoss. A normal press run for single-copy sales is about 25,000; by noon Monday, the Times-Picayune had printed at least 200,000 copies over that, reports Mark Fitzgerald.
Posted at 3:00 PM on Feb. 8, 2010
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WP says up to 450,000 Sunday papers were delivered in the snow
Politico.com
The Post says the remaining 200,000 or copies should get to homes by tonight. Meanwhile, the paper's site brought in twice the typical weekend pageviews, reports Michael Calderone.
Posted at 2:21 PM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Smith returns to Philly Inquirer after agreeing to suppress political views
Journal-isms || Philadelphia Inquirer
smith
Stephen A. Smith's sports column ran Monday for the first time in more than two years after he agreed to the Inquirer's demand that he remove political opinions from his website and agree to stop espousing them on cable news shows, reports Richard Prince.
Posted at 1:26 PM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Oops!: Virginian-Pilot reverses Super Bowl score
Virginian-Pilot || Times-Picayune
"We're embarrassed, and we apologize to all our readers, especially Saints fans," says a note from the managing editor. || Meanwhile, in New Orleans... "We expect this to be the best-selling Times-Picayune in our 173-year history."
Posted at 12:59 PM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Toyota dealers pull ads off ABC stations because of "excessive coverage"
ABC News
The dealers in five southeast states shifted their commercial time buys to non-ABC stations in the same markets "as punishment for the reporting" done by ABC News and chief investigative correspondent Brian Ross, according to an ABC station manager.
Posted at 12:30 PM on Feb. 8, 2010
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"We need the Baffler more now than ever," says editor
Chicago Tribune
baffler
"That contrarian attitude toward culture, that scoffing attitude that people associated with us -- the plan now is to revive it," says Baffler founder Thomas Frank. A new issue of the magazine -- "a quarterly publication that only came out once a year" -- is slowly making its way to bookstores.
Posted at 11:54 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Chicago morning show hosts fail to ask Zell about Tribune during long interview
Vocalo.org
Did Sam Zell put the subject off limits? No, says Mike North, one of the four WBBM-TV hosts who conducted the 40-minute interview. "It was my fault. I was supposed to ask about the Cubs and Tribune, and I didn't."
Posted at 11:49 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Magazine newsstand sales fall 9.1% in second half of 2009
NYTimes.com
Titles with dramatic single-copy declines include W, down 41.7%; Newsweek, down 41.3%; SmartMoney, down 37%; Time, down 34.9%; and Redbook, down 30.1%.
Posted at 10:30 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Newsday union leaders to meet with management to review paper's financials
Romenesko Misc.
The meeting will be held Tuesday, nearly three weeks after union members overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to reduce salaries by 10%, cut vacations, and lengthen the work week. Since the 473-10 vote, Local 406 members have been displaying solidarity by wearing the same color on chosen days.

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Posted at 10:01 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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"Writing about Fox News is a lot like being married"
Broadcasting & Cable
"Even if you try to do something harmless, chances are good you're still going to get yelled at," writes Ben Grossman.
Posted at 9:48 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Where's the next generation of media Richie Riches?
AdAge.com
richie
Are there any billionaires left who are willing to take losses on worthy media properties? asks Simon Dumenco. "For that matter, how much more patience does the current generation of Richie Riches have left?" Dumenco points out that "a lot of the loudest new players in media have no use at all for billionaire benefactors."
Posted at 8:55 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Demand Media "has been as close to a safety net as anyone gets in this business"
New York Times
That's what Nashville videographer Dimitri LaBarge tells David Carr. (Demand generally pays $15 to $20 per article and $30 per video.) Unpaid Glamour magazine intern and Demand contributor Heather Mayer says: "I wish I could say that I am doing the work for extra money, but right now, it is the only money I have coming in. I'm torn, because they make a pretty good business out of what we do and pay us not much." || Related video.
Posted at 8:41 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Stephanopoulos doesn't regret moving to "Good Morning America"
Los Angeles Times
"I had real questions about taking this job," George Stephanopoulus tells Matea Gold. "I was wrong. I don't feel like I have really given up so much and I've gained so much more." || Washington Post: "News doctor" Frank Magid, who helped develop "Good Morning America," is dead at 78.
Posted at 8:29 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Ombud: NYT Jerusalem bureau chief should be reassigned
New York Times
bronner
Ethan Bronner (left) has a son in the Israeli military. "The Times sent a reporter overseas to provide disinterested coverage of one of the world's most intense and potentially explosive conflicts, and now his son has taken up arms for one side," writes ombudsman Clark Hoyt. "Even the most sympathetic reader could reasonably wonder how that would affect the father, especially if shooting broke out." || Executive editor Bill Keller responds. || Related from the Jerusalem Post.
> Goldberg: I'm glad Keller is NYT editor, and not Hoyt
Posted at 8:02 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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WH press feels bypassed by Obama in favor of TV shows, YouTube
Washington Post
"It's a source of great frustration here," says CBS White House correspondent Chip Reid. "It's important for us to hold the president's feet to the fire." President Obama hasn't held a full-scale news conference since July.
Posted at 7:32 AM on Feb. 8, 2010
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Friday, February 05, 2010 Headlines
Santa Barbara News-Press owner ordered to pay ex-editor nearly $750,000 in legal fees
"I understand the shock and awe that some liberals feel about Fox News"
Additional items for February 5, 2010
Posner concedes he lifted from Miami Herald
Two MediaNews papers to start charging in May
Lois Smith: "I'm so glad I'm not doing publicity now"
Study: Magazines that cut subscription prices still lose subscribers
Seattle Times completes renegotiation of debt
Palin: "Gossip crap" in Anchorage paper "bugs me"
"George Packer's generally right about Twitter, but..."
Hedge-fund creditors win round in Philly newspapers bankruptcy case
Mutter says it again: Journalists should demand to be paid for their work
Tribune Co.'s KTLA confuses viewers with its valentine to Ford Motor Co.
"Sawyer has always been the Katharine Hepburn of the newsroom"
Any journalist who cheerleads uncritically for Twitter is essentially asking for his own destruction
Thursday, February 04, 2010 Headlines
An e-reader business model that just might work
LAT loses Pulitzer-winning auto writer Neil to WSJ
Additional items for February 4, 2010
Pulitzer would have loved Enquirer's Edwards coverage
"Breitbart doesn't even exist without the MSM"
Google News: We'll be happy to work with papers that put up pay walls
Ex-Detroit Free Press editor Andrews named visiting prof at UNR's Reynolds j-school
Yahoo to sell HotJobs to rival Monster.com for $225M
NPR criticized for airing Horowitz's remarks about Zinn
NYT shouldn't wait until 2011 to launch meter system
NYO, Las Vegas publisher to put out free weekly
Why the National Enquirer won't win a Pulitzer
Report: Blogging "lost its luster for many young users"
Chicagoan rents an apartment to store her Playboys
Tackett to take on expanded role in Bloomberg's Washington bureau
Stewart uses O'Reilly appearance to blast Fox News's Obama coverage
Murdoch has a new weapon for his battle against NYT
Wednesday, February 03, 2010 Headlines
Job applications rolling in at eBay founder's Peer News
"Five years ago, NYT could have bought the best local blogs for a song"
Additional items for February 3, 2010
Demand Media veep defends $15 per article pay
Time Inc. subscription revenue down only 6% in Q4
CBS News boss denies reports of Couric salary cut
Can magazines really afford to give away iPads the way SI gave away sneakerphones?
Kaplan out as Parade magazine editor-in-chief
Minnesota Law & Politics folds after parent sells Super Lawyers guide to Thomson Reuters
Mark Cuban to media execs: "Everybody wants to take your content"
NYer's Packer needs to get over his fear of Twitter
Critic's reviews of Sundance films lifted from festival guide
NBC News boss blasts media treatment of Zucker
Breitbart: "I'm sorry, mainstream media. It's over."
CBS News cuts surprisingly deep, top producers axed
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