- SATURDAY
Police chief sends sergeant to reporter’s home after midnight to demand article revision | Poynter.Oakland Tribune The Berkeley, Calif., police chief apologized Friday after sending a sergeant to the home of newspaper reporter Doug Oakley at 12:45 a.m. to insist on changes to a story posted earlier in the evening.- FRIDAY
- Its building destroyed by a tornado, a newspaper roll on. A great story of persistence and dedication!
West Liberty newspaper rises from rubble | Tornado outbreak of March 2 | Kentucky.comLike any good newspaperman, Earl Kinner is used to finding news. Last Friday, the news found him. Kinner, the owner and publisher of the ...
How a North Dakota Newspaper’s Review of the Olive Garden Went ViralAt first, Grand Forks Herald editor Mary Jo Hotzler didn't find anything especially remarkable about a restaurant column posted Wednesday on the website of her North Dakota newspaper. Then overnight, the story went viral.- THURSDAY
Justice Department may sue Apple, publishers on e-book pricing: WSJ
Thu Mar 8, 2012 12:33am EST (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department has warned Apple and five of the biggest U.S. publishers that it plans to sue them, accusing them of colluding to raise the prices of electronic books, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.
The Case for Saving the Metro Editorial BoardUntil fairly recently, local editorial pages held something close to a monopoly on publicly stated opinion in metropolitan areas. "There weren't a lot of other places where people were saying this is a good candidate, this is a bad candidate; this is good policy, this is bad policy," says Joshua Benton, director of the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard.- WEDNESDAY
CEO Cook kicks off Apple's iPad-unveiling event
SAN FRANCISCO | Wed Mar 7, 2012 1:13pm EST SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Apple Inc is expected to take the wraps off a faster 4G-equipped iPad on Wednesday, hoping the latest version of its tablet can safeguard its dominance as rivals from Amazon to Samsung pile into the market.- TUESDAY
Newspapers ask FCC to eliminate ownership rule on TV stationsBy Todd Shields WASHINGTON - The Federal Communications Commission should repeal a rule that bars common ownership of a television statio...
Five Companies Steer All NewsPrior to the digital age, there were three companies that, acting like undersea currents, steered all news. Namely, I am referring to the...- MONDAY
The Economist Hands All Digital Strategy To Its Tablet ChiefThe Economist is handing control of its website to its tablet magazines controller, in a bid to unite the previously competitive units. Oscar Grut, who was formerly digital editions managing director, has been promoted to the new role of managing director for "Economist Digital" as a whole.
PEJ: Newspapers are losing $7 in print revenue for every $1 in digital gained | Poynter.PEJ Revenue is just one of the problems facing American newspapers, says a new Project for Excellence in Journalism study. The culture at...
News executives acknowledge culture wars raging between print and digital | Poynter.After 18 months of work and countless pinky-shake vows of confidentiality, my colleagues at the Project for Excellence In Journalism have...
How Newspapers Are Faring Trying to Build Digital Revenue - Pew Research CenterThe search for a new revenue model to revive the newspaper industry is making only halting progress, but some individual newspapers are f...
The Search for a New Business Model | Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ)By Tom Rosenstiel and Mark Jurkowitz and Hong Ji of PEJ A new study, which combines detailed proprietary data from individual newspapers ...- I wrote this more than two years ago, and it's really distressing to see the culture hasn't changed much since then (even as Rome burns around us).
What’s killing newspapers? Newsrooms |Posted on | November 11, 2009 | 4 Comments The last two mornings, I've arisen before sunrise, I shuffled out into the chill, damp air and...- Pew: Papers’ Biggest Revenue Threat Is Inertia; Second Biggest Is ActionBefore we get into the results of the latest detailed look at how U.S. newspapers are faring on the digital revenue front, let’s get one serious qualm out of the way: the Project for Excellence in Journalism’s 16-month study that cuts across an intensely active time for experiments in charging for digital content doesn’t cover paid content at all.

