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BusinessWeek November 29, 2004 Mike France |
Is There A Market For Nonpartisan News? One of the worst by-products of our venomously partisan political culture is a growing distrust of anyone who claims to be nonpartisan -- particularly journalists. |
Reason October 2004 Matt Welch |
Unbalanced Like a Fox Rupert Murdoch's lead shows that targeting a partisan audience can be a very lucrative business. |
Salon.com July 26, 2001 Robert Scheer |
Consolidation politics With Michael Powell in charge at the FCC, more media megamergers are on the way... |
Reason May 2004 Matt Welch |
Gossip Wants to Be Free In defense of online scandal mongering and how the media handles it. |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 Bianco, Rossant & Gard |
The Future Of The New York Times New York Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. has his hands full with weaker earnings, a changing media world and a scandal's aftermath. He also has an ambitious business plan. |
Reason December 2002 Matt Welch |
Woe is Media There have never been better conditions for journalism than in present-day America. Yet there is an influential movement, and an entire publishing mini-genre, dedicated to convincing us that's not so. It's time to save journalism from its saviors. |
Science News Janet Raloff |
Real News: An Endangered Species Many recently jettisoned reporters covered science, medicine, environment, biotechnology, and research-policy issues. |
The Motley Fool March 16, 2010 Alyce Lomax |
More Bad News for News Most folks don't want to pay to stay informed. |
Salon.com May 10, 2002 Scott Rosenberg |
Much ado about blogging Is it the end of journalism as we know it? Or just 6 zillion writers in search of an editor? Neither... |
InternetNews December 14, 2009 |
FCC Official Blasts Social Media 'Smear Campaign' Mark Lloyd recounts the online attacks that brought him hate mail and death threats as he looks ahead to the future of media. |
Search Engine Watch May 5, 2010 Mark Pack |
Lib Dems' View: How Much of an Internet General Election Has it Been? Local U.K. online campaigning is more an evolution of existing political campaign than a whole new approach, and it's changing what an election campaign on the ground looks like. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Spencer E. Ante |
Have Web Site, Will Investigate The New York Times may have nothing to worry about, but freelance Iraq correspondent Christopher Allbritton's story hints at a new business model that could remake the lesser tiers of the media world. Call it pay-to-read journalism. |
InternetNews November 5, 2004 Erin Joyce |
Are Bloggers Really Journalists? When bloggers start to consider themselves journalists in the traditional sense they risk becoming what they often detest and deplore in traditional and new media. |
Reason June 2009 Tim Cavanaugh |
Hired News Who will do investigative reporting once the daily newspapers go out of business? |
Chemistry World June 2009 Bibiana Campos-Seijo |
Editorial: Feeling the crunch The latest sector to feel the recession is the world of publishing and journalism. The print media industry has seen a number of high-profile casualties - and science journalism in particular has finally started to succumb to the difficult financial landscape. |
The Motley Fool October 1, 2004 Dave Marino-Nachison |
Washington Post Looking at Slate Is the newspaper publisher's interest in the online magazine a stab at building a pay product? |
InternetNews January 14, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Will Online Video Save the News Industry? News executives weigh in on the industry's next frontier as the sun sets on traditional print journalism. |
The Motley Fool November 25, 2009 Rich Smith |
Rupert Murdoch Saves the World If we're really lucky, he'll at least save journalism as we know it by charging for content. Newspapers need to find a new economic paradigm that permits them to profit from their product. |
Salon.com September 20, 2000 Heidi Kriz |
Business reporting is hot! Hot! Hot! A formerly sleepy media backwater comes alive as more journalists' pulses throb in time to stock tickers. What happened? Why did business journalism suddenly become sexy? |
Wired July 21, 2008 Yasha Levine |
Blogger Sergey Gorshkov Will Dish Dirt on Russian Politicians -- for a Price Gorshkov publishes kompromat.ru, a scandal page that has antagonized the ruling elite since 1999 and made him one of his country's top Internet personalities. |
Information Today January 29, 2009 Nancy Herther |
Internet Journalism Gains Another Foothold With GlobalPost GlobalPost has assembled an all-star lineup of 65 award-winning journalists located in 45 countries, with special attention given to covering "those geographic areas that have been historically under-reported by the American news media." |
IDB America April 2004 Santiago Real de Azua |
Melancholy Defense of a Fast-Changing Profession A celebrated Polish journalist reflects on the future of the news in his book, The Journalist's Five Senses. |
InternetNews February 29, 2008 |
More Americans Turning to Web For News As the public turns to Internet outlets, will traditional reporting be left behind? |
Sports Central September 30, 2010 Mark Chalifoux |
Picture This Reporters are not fans. There has to be at least a facade of professionalism. |
Search Engine Watch September 24, 2010 Frank Watson |
Will the Death of Newspapers Also Kill Our Freedoms? Sites like Google News, Facebook and Twitter have given people the belief that they shouldn't pay for information. Hopefully we never rely solely on 140 characters to tell us the news of the world. |
InternetNews May 6, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Does Government Belong in the News Industry? With newspapers floundering in the digital age, calls heat up for government to intervene. |
InternetNews December 2, 2009 |
Top House Democrat Laments Online News Woes Government can preserve accountability journalism in the face of newspapers' decline, says Rep. Waxman, chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. |
The Motley Fool January 22, 2007 David Lee Smith |
Blog Time in Newspaperville The last best hope of the dailies. Newspapers' own blog pages appear to be generating traffic at a rapidly expanding rate. |
Information Today August 20, 2013 Nancy K. Herther |
What's Next for the Bezos-Owned Washington Post The sale of the Post hasn't been the only recent ownership change in the newspaper industry, but the Post is important far beyond the D.C. area with a rich 136-year history. |
Information Today April 1, 2013 Paula J. Hane |
The Latest Pew Report on The State of the News Media "The State of the News Media 2013," by the Pew Research Center, concludes that the U.S. has a "news industry that is more undermanned and unprepared to uncover stories, dig deep into emerging ones, or to question information put into its hands." |
HBS Working Knowledge November 16, 2009 Martha Lagace |
The Times Captures History of American Business A new volume edited and narrated by Nancy Koehn, The Story of American Business: From the Pages of The New York Times, presents more than a hundred timely articles from the 1850s to today. |
Reason December 2008 Tim Cavanaugh |
Stop the Journalismisms! The media business is chock full of platitudes, most of them wrong. |
Information Today July 21, 2015 Barbie E. Keiser |
Winning Resources for Global Journalism The Global Editors Network Summit in Barcelona, Spain, featured its fourth annual international competition, Startups for News, rewarding "the most promising startups that provide innovative services for newsrooms." |
Information Today November 10, 2008 Nancy Herther |
The Christian Science Monitor Moves to a Web-Based Model--Is This the Future of News? Monitor editor, John Yemma, noted that the "old business model for print journalism is broken" |
InternetNews May 19, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
All Options on the Table for News in the Net Age With newspapers on the brink, debate in Washington open to nonprofit status, new payment models, and anything else that's not a bailout. |
PC Magazine September 27, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
The Folly of Citizen Journalism Citizen journalism is like citizen professional baseball. You can't play pro baseball just because you think the Seattle Mariners stink. |
The Motley Fool November 3, 2004 Bill Mann |
Once Again, Blogs Loom Large The big networks have lost control to a ragtag bunch of instapundits who nearly influenced an election. |
ONLINE July 2001 Bruce Rosenstein |
Searching for News Online and on the Web: A Head to Head Comparison Nothing changes faster than the news. This makes news searching exciting, but adds difficulty. It also means that for optimum results you usually have to search both the Web and traditional online databases, such as LEXIS-NEXIS, Factiva, and Dialog... |
The Motley Fool May 18, 2005 Tim Hanson |
Big Media Blues Poor reporting and Internet competitors endanger traditional news organizations' bottom line. |
AskMen.com |
Can The Media Be Trusted? More bad news for journalists: The percentage of people who believe their work is inaccurate and biased continues to grow. |
Reason August 2003 Joli Jensen |
Journalism's Identity Crisis What kind of news do we need for democracy to flourish? This question bedeviled journalists and scholars throughout the 20th century, and now it animates the latest book from sociologist Herbert J. Gans. His answer, however, is oddly contradictory. |
The Motley Fool January 10, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Sign of the Times Newspapers face the challenge of whether or not to charge for online subscriptions. |
Reason June 2008 Jesse Walker |
The Wire Vs. The Sun The last ten episodes of HBO's The Wire provoked furious debates between the program's defenders and its suddenly swelling camp of detractors; a series that had always been praised for its realism was now damned for not being realistic enough. |
Reason February 2006 Cathy Young |
Smears in Cyberspace Sometimes in journalism, the medium is the story. So it is with the ongoing saga of The Blogs vs. The Mainstream Media, endlessly flogged and blogged in the old and new media alike. |
Information Today August 5, 2010 |
New Content Added to Publish2 News Exchange With the addition of Demotix to News Exchange, newspapers will also be able to buy photos a la carte for coverage of major news events around the U.S. and around the world. |
The Motley Fool January 11, 2005 Dave Marino-Nachison |
Newspapers Aren't Read All Over Newspapers are easy to love, but the industry's investment outlook isn't so appealing. |
Reason February 2002 Sam MacDonald |
Misunderestimating the Public Press gatekeepers may fret about information, but the average Joe is swimming in it... |
InternetNews February 25, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
If Paid Web Content Is Dead, Are Newspapers? Some papers look to online content to save the day, but fret that micropayments or a fully ad-supported newsroom won't pay the bills. |
Reason April 2002 Tim Cavanaugh |
Bloviation Nation If news junkies are fed up with palaver, they've got a funny way of showing it... |
Fast Company April 2002 John Ellis |
All the News That's Fit to Blog Say good-bye to the old-school pundits on the op-ed page of the "New York Times." It's time to blog... |