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New York Times publishes Murdoch investigation

Posted by Martin Stabe on 25 June 2007 at 07:06
Tags: New York Times, Sunday Times, Times, Times Media, Wall Street Journal

The New York Times has this morning published its much-anticipated investigation into News Corp. The story, which Murdoch himself declined to be interviewed for, includes four bylines, including Jane Perlez and Raymond Bonner reporting from London.

The key line in the New York Times investigation, which comes as Murdoch seeks to acquire the rival Wall Street Journal, come in paragraph nine:

What worries his critics is that Mr. Murdoch will use The Journal, which has won many Pulitzer Prizes and has a sterling reputation for accuracy and fairness, as yet another tool to further his myriad financial and political agendas.

The piece explains that the Bancroft family, which controls Dow Jones, has sought assurances of the Wall Street Journal’s continued editorial independence if Murdoch were to become its proprietor, before noting that “When he bought The Times of London in 1981 he gave similar assurances, but some former editors say he meddled with news operations anyway”

The piece pays close attention to News Corp’s governance of The Times, which Murdoch is said to favour replicating at the Wall Street Journal. It quotes former editors Harry Evans, Fred Emery and Andrew Neil to allege Murdoch’s interference with his British broadsheets.

Neil is quoted as saying: “He puts people in who will do his bidding”.

But current Times editor Robert Thompson, who is believed to have a key role in Murdoch’s attempt to acquire Dow Jones, paints a different picture: “I’ve had absolutely no interference and a lot of investment in a loss-making newspaper, for which Rupert Murdoch gets no credit.”

The bulk of the story, however, examines the Murdoch empire’s influence on US politics, and particularly media regulation. In the dozen years since moving the company to America, the New York Times says, Murdoch’s companies have “thrived in a highly regulated environment in part because of his remarkable ability to mold the rules to fit his needs.”

The piece also looks at campaign contributions linked to Murdoch or News Corp, which are more balanced between Republicans and Democrats than might be expected in the United States, where his best-known properties are Fox News and the New York Post.

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Bloggers’ reaction to the British Press Awards

Posted by Martin Stabe on 29 March 2007 at 16:57
Tags: British Press Awards, Guardian, Observer, Sunday Times

Here’s a shock: Some right-wing political bloggers have reacted badly to their journalistic bête noir, Polly Toynbee, collecting the gong for columnist of the year. on Monday night.

For the Devil’s Kitchen, this was a sure sign that “everyone else in the MSM is even stupider than Polly herself”.

He went on to claim:

If we needed any proof of the Leftist sympathies and utter mediocrity of the British MSM, this surely must be the clincher although I must admit that handing the National Newspaper of the Year to The Observer would also go some way to confirming the rightness of one’s utter contempt for the entire sorry industry.

DK quickly updated his post to acknowledge the reminder of another blogger, Bookdrunk, that more conservative papers have also won the award in recent years.

Of course, this just proves the point anyway:

If there’s one thing that bloggers who cover the media agree on, it’s that there’s plenty of mediocrity and outright hackery for the entire political spectrum.

Oh dear.

The bloggers who earn their living in the dastardly MSM were a tad more charitable.

Weber Shadwick chief executive Colin Bryne proves you can’t have it both ways. After years of complaints about bad behaviour at the Awards, Bryne was “left wishing for a bit of the old spicy behaviour and wondering why the lady in the gold bubble dress on the next table had to visit the loo every ten minutes”.

City University head of journalism and Press Gazette columnist Adrian Monck was left wishing for wifi — or at least mobile reception in the hall. In Monck’s comments, Neil McIntosh kicks off the much-needed debate about how we should reflect print-online convergence in next year’s awards. More on that important topic soon…

HarperPress editor Annabel Wright. Over at 5th Estate, she congratulates the Sunday Times’s Christina Lamb for winning the fourth British Press Award of her career as Foreign Reporter of the Year.

“Foreign correspondents seem to me a very particular breed, driven to take risks that would terrify most of us,” she writes, before posting excepts from the introduction of a book of Lamb’s journalism that will be published in July.

(more…)

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Times editor backs Google in Belgian case

Posted by Martin Stabe on 11 October 2006 at 12:45
Tags: Google, Journalism, Sunday Times, Times, Times Online

Robert Thomson at the Ivy

Times editor Robert Thomson has criticised the Belgian court ruling that found Google in breach of Belgium’s French- and German-language newspapers’ copyright, and said that he has no problem with Google News as long as it sends traffic to TimesOnline.

Speaking at Press Gazette’s “Breakfast with the Editor” event yesterday, Thomson said: “My reading in English of some of the judgement suggests that the judge doesn’t really know what the Internet is — or was, or will be. You can’t corral content in the way that that decision implies.”

Thomson went on to outline his view on Google News, the search giant’s news aggregation tool that has occasionally proved controversial in newspaper publishing circles.

“Google News at the moment gives you headlines, and I know they’ve been working on a program that gives you a couple of paragraphs without actually taking you to the web site,” he said, apparently referring to Google’s purchase earlier this year of “Orion”, software that allows a search engine to extract relevant parts of a page directly from within a search engine.

“I have no issue with them as long as they’re directing you to our site and to the wonderful advertisements that you take out on TimesOnline — that is content being rewarded with revenue, and we can all understand that relationship. But if they had two paragraphs of our content or three paragraphs of our content and put contextual ads or display ads against that without driving the traffic to our site, we’d have an issue with that — and I’d probably call that Belgian judge to see if he wouldn’t mind sitting in session over here.”

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AOP: The evolving content model

Posted by Martin Stabe on 4 October 2006 at 10:26
Tags: Bebo, Channel 4, Incisive Media, Journalism, Sunday Times, Times, Times Media, UK AOP

The first panel of the day features Ron Henwood, new business director of Channel 4, Times Media digital publisher Zach Leonard, Incisive media chairman Tim Weller and Jim Scheinman of Bebo.

The famously “platform agnostic” Weller praises Incisive Media’s “fantastic” B2B journalists, but says that one challenge is been to wean them off the habit of clinging onto their stories until they appear under a byline in a printed magazine.

Having established printing as quickly as possible in online publications as the norm at Incisive, however, leadto new challenges for reinventing the established print products.

“Print products need to be more discoursive, forward-thinking, and analystical” rather than just printing news, Weller says.

In the  Q&A, the the panel is asked several questions touching on the competition between businesses focusing on horizontal content and those concentrating on narrow vertical niches. One question touches on whether the growth of vertical search engines is a threat to B2B publishers like Weller.

He rejects this, saying that vertical search is an opportunity for Incisive, and one which the company is already exploring in the insurance industry.

But Weller says narrower is generally better, and that his company always hopes to create products that appeal to the most specific community of buyers as possible.

Times Media’s Zach Leonard, however, says that for “horizontal” general interest publications like the Times titles, the correct response it to create many specific vertical channels that allow advertisers to target readers more precisely.

Leonard is also asked whether the Times has any plans for paid content products. He alludes to the Times newspapers’ vast archive, stretching back into the 18th century, which it is looking to use better online.

Basic archives can be used to simply increase traffic, but specific packages of that content could become paid-for content. He mentions that Virginia Woolfe once wrote film reviews for the Times and that this might be something that could be a product to monetize through reader payment.

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Hitwise: Journalists’ attention is only one cause of blogs’ traffic increases

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 August 2006 at 13:38
Tags: Blogs, Journalism, Reuters, Sunday Times

Attention from mainstream media is only sometimes the major cause of increased traffic to a blog, according Hitwise UK director of research Heather Hopkins.
Today Hitwise released some of the traffic data for the week ending 19 August, which Hopkins referred to in her case studies earlier this week.
Three of the blogs posting major week-on-week gains in that week were involved in stories that garnered significant national media attention:

  • Girl with a One-Track Mind, an erotic blog which has been made into a book, drew extensive media attention after the Sunday Times unmasked its pseudonymous author as Zoe Margolis, a film assistant from north London. he increased attention lead to an eight-fold increase in visits to the blog in the past two weeks, making it the second most-popular UK blog being tracked by Hitwise.
  • Little Green Footballs, the US-based blog that exposed Reuters freelance Adnan Hajj’s manipulated photographs from Beirut, saw its market share of visits in the UK increase 88 per cent week-on-week.
  • EU Referendum blogger Richard North, who posted a critique of photographs taken at Qana in Lebanon, also saw an increase in traffic, becoming the 10th most-visited site among UK blogs being tracked by Hitwise. Journalists have strongly disputed North’s allegations.

However, the most popular UK blog being tracked by Hitwise, Fugufish, appears to have drawn most of its majority of the visits to the site from e-mail services, online communities and chat services

Fugufish rose to fame after posting several viral videos, including one of the band OK Go and one of David Bowie in the film The Labyrinth.

In a statement today, Hopkins said: “Whilst the mainstream media can be an important catalyst for growth, links from other blogs, email and social networking sites can also drive growth. This reflects the community around blogging and a maturing of the medium that now can create its own celebrities.”

1 comment

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Harold Evans in New York wall spat

Posted by Jeffrey Blyth on 2 May 2006 at 13:18
Tags: Journalism, Sunday Times, United States

It’s not quite the Berlin Wall, but Sir Harry Evans is having problems with a wall that divides his New York apartment from his next-door neighbour. It’s is only a foot thick, but it does – at the moment – provide the former Sunday Times editor and his wife Tina Brown some privacy when they hold a garden party.

Now a developer has bought the adjacent property and, according to the New York Post, is planning to tear down the property and replace it with a 15-storey apartment complex.

And that – according to Sir Harry, who claims ownership to six inches of the wall - could mean the end to their privacy. As he put it: “This guy comes in like Ronald Reagan and says ‘Tear down the wall’? – a reference to former American president’s famous 1987 speech in Berlin.

It’s expected the battle over the wall will end up in a New York court.

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Editorial Intelligence: ‘a disgusting idea’?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 3 April 2006 at 09:42
Tags: BBC, Daily Mail, Ethics, Journalism, Spectator, Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Times

The Sunday Times yesterday reported on a row — sorry, “catfight”, among leading media figures over whether journalists and PRs should hobnob in a forum sponsored by big organisations.Some journalists, it seems, are not impressed by Editorial Intelligence, PR guru Julia Hobsbawm’s “information and networking club” which seeks to bring together spinmeisters and leading columnists.

The Sunday Times story appears to have been provoked by a Guardian column in which Christina Odone  described EI as “PR meets journalism in Caribbean freebies, shameless backscratching and undeclared interests”. Institutionalising the “already rather dubious relationship” between hacks, flacks and the organsiations the latter represent, Odone wrote, “is just bad news.”

Odode is not alone, it seems. The Sunday Times reports that BBC has forced Barney Jones and Kirsty Lang to quit the Editorial Intelligence advisory board, after learning that they would be paid £1,000 to hold the position and £200 to attend its seminars.
Melanie Phillips has refused to get involved and saying “I don’t think that journalists and PRs should be in a jolly boat together.” Rod Liddle described the project as “a disgusting idea which suggests journalists might be up for hire.”  John Lloyd also resigned, following his appointment to head the Reuters journalism institute at Oxford — but Matthew d’Ancona is less concerned about his membership.

Editorial Intelligence sells its corporate subscribers access to an online directory of profiles of  and columnists, along with its quarterly magazine and access to networking events to bring PRs and journalists together.

Are Odone, Liddle and Phillips right — is this something journalists should not get involved with?

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British Press Awards: Feature Writer of the Year

Posted by Martin Stabe on 20 March 2006 at 20:59
Tags: British Press Awards, Journalism, Sunday Times

The Feature Writer of the Year is Bryan Appleyard of the Sunday Times.

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British Press Awards: Foreign Reporter of the Year

Posted by Martin Stabe on 20 March 2006 at 20:45
Tags: Journalism, Sunday Times

Hala Jabar of the Sunday Times is the Foreign Reporter of the Year for the second year in a row.

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British Press Awards: Cartoonist of the Year

Posted by Martin Stabe on 20 March 2006 at 20:33
Tags: British Press Awards, Journalism, Sunday Times

Cartoonist of the Year is Gerald Scarfe of the Sunday Times.

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