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Mecom calls off Polish newspaper stake sale

Posted by Paul McNally on 24 June 2009 at 14:30
Tags: Media Business

European newspaper group Mecom has abandoned plans to sell its 51 per cent stake in Polish newspaper group Presspublica.

The group said today it had terminated all sale discussions because the offers did not come close to reflecting the value of the titles.

“Mecom has agreed with the 49 per cent shareholder, PWR, that any future approach by a third party will be considered jointly by the Presspublica shareholders while preserving the individual rights of each,” the company said.

“Mecom views as unlikely any bid approach in the current circumstances.

“Therefore Mecom commits to being a long term shareholder in the development of Presspublica and has agreed to work with PWR energetically towards securing the business for the future.”

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Daily Sport says it is back above 80,000 sales mark

Posted by Paul McNally on 23 June 2009 at 18:04
Tags: National Newspapers

The Daily Sport has put some numbers behind its claim earlier this month to have seen an ‘encouraging uplift’ in sales.

In a recent trading update, parent company Sport Media Group said its average daily circulation in May was in excess of 75,000 for the first time since November last year.

In a further statement today, Sport editor-in-chief Murray Morse said circulation of the weekday editions of the Daily Sport was up 9.4 per cent in the seven weeks after Easter (from 13 April to the end of May) to 80,000.

The Saturday edition, he said, was up 6.45 per cent to an average of 51,000 and the Sunday Sport climbed 11.9 per cent to 70,000.

The Sport titles pulled out of the ABC audit in February, so today’s figures cannot be officially verified.

“These figures are a tribute to the entire company, coming as they do at a time when we’ve had to make redundancies in all areas,” Morse said.

“The editors of the Daily Sport and Sunday Sport, Pam McVitie and Nick Appleyard, and Gary Doran who looks after the Saturday Sport, have all worked tremendously hard to make the papers more exciting and a ‘must-have’ purchase – and this is paying off handsomely.

“And the figures are also a tribute to our honorary publisher, David Sullivan, who has breathed new life into our titles in recent weeks.”

Sullivan, a former Daily Sport owner, rejoined the paper recently to help boost its circulation and profitability.

Morse added: “What is remarkable about these figures is that they come in the face of continuing cover price cuts by rival red tops, The Sun, and the Daily Star, and in a climate where nearly every newspaper in the country, be it national or regional, is suffering falling sales.”

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Newspaper body Wan agrees to merger with Ifra

Posted by Paul McNally on 23 June 2009 at 16:35
Tags: National Newspapers

The World Association of Newspapers has agreed to a merger with another industry body, Ifra.

According to the Huffington Post, the marriage was approved at a recent Wan board meeting in Barcelona.

The new company will be called Wan/Ifra and the Ifra president Horst Pirker will become its first vice-president.

Wan president Gavin O’Reilly said the merger could be completed by as early as 1 July.

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Standard arts columnist Norman Lebrecht steps down

Posted by Paul McNally on 23 June 2009 at 15:51
Tags: Journalism

London Evening Standard arts columnist Norman Lebrecht is the latest journalist to announce his departure from the paper, after seven years in the job.

He said today: “I owe myself a short sabbatical and my desire for a break coincided with a change of direction at the Standard.

“The new editor, Geordie Greig, very kindly asked me to stay on, but I have a new series coming up on BBC Radio 3, a novel coming out next month and a sheaf of plans to continue writing about the arts in my own particular way, so it seemed a good moment to make a clean break.”

Russian billionaire Alexander Lebedev bought a 75 per cent stake in the Standard from Daily Mail and General Trust earlier this year.

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Thomson Reuters to quit London Stock Exchange

Posted by Paul McNally on 23 June 2009 at 09:35
Tags: Media Business

Global news giant Thomson Reuters has announced it plans to delist from the London Stock Exchange - leaving just three news organisations in the FTSE100.

The group said today it would remain listed on the Toronto and New York exchanges. Quitting London would “consolidate and improve the trading of the company’s shares and simplify its capital structure”, it said.

Chief executive Tom Glocer said London shareholders represented only five per cent of the company’s total. He stressed that the move would have no effect on staff working in the UK.

“Our commitment to customers, employees and other stakeholders in London, the United Kingdom and Europe is unchanged by where we list our shares,” Glocer added.

“London is a vital global capital for the markets that we serve, and home to more than 5,000 of our employees.”

The proposed move will be put to a shareholder vote on 7 August.

Thomson Reuters’ departure from the London stock exchange leaves BSkyB, Reed Elsevier and Pearson in the index of the UK’s 100 leading companies.

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Veronica Guerin murder suspect dies in prison

Posted by Paul McNally on 22 June 2009 at 08:53
Tags: Journalism

The man suspected of killing investigative journalist Veronica Guerin died in his prison cell on the Isle of Wight on Friday morning.

Patrick Holland was serving an eight-year sentence in Parkhurst prison for a kidnap plot.

The 70-year-old has always denied shooting the Sunday Independent crime reporter in June 1996 and has never been charged with her murder.

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Evening Standard to share with New York Daily News

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 15:11
Tags: Journalism

The London Evening Standard has reached a partnership agreement with the New York Daily News that will see the two city papers share some editorial content.

According to the Guardian, the deal has been described as a “formal relationship” but no further details about how it will work in practice have been made public.

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$5.1m in funding for Knight News Challenge winners

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 12:35
Tags: Online

Nine digital journalism projects have been selected as the winners of this year’s Knight News Challenge, picking up a share of $5.1m in funding.

This is the third year of the five-year $25m competition, an international contest to fund experiments in new forms of digital news.

The big winner this year is DocumentCloud, a joint venture between the New York Times and ProPublica. It will use the funding to create an online investigative database where people can find, share and analyse documents.

The next round of applications opens on 1 September.

PDF: Full list of winners and descriptions of their projects

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Tory MP: Telegraph investigation has become witch-hunt

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 11:55
Tags: National Newspapers

A Tory MP has attacked the Daily Telegraph’s investigation into MPs’ expenses - accusing the paper of “doing the reputation of British journalism a lot of damage”.

Northampton South MP Brian Binley made the Telegraph front page on Wednesday with a story headed: “Tory claims £57,000 to rent flat from own company”.

Writing in the Independent today, the MP said he had tried to explain his situation to a Telegraph reporter before publication, but said “they were going to run a story about me whatever I said”.

“Sadly, such is now the Telegraph’s thirst and hunger for making mischief that it has long since abandoned the idea of fair and honest reporting,” he wrote.

Binley added: “This has gone too far, and it is about time someone stood up to them. They have taken it upon themselves to become judge and jury, without any thought to seeking the truth before they publish.”

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Veteran journalists among Guardian redundancies

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 10:46
Tags: National Newspapers

The Guardian has named some of the journalists taking voluntary redundancy as part of Guardian News and Media’s programme to cut editorial headcount from 850 to 800.

They include Westminster correspondent David Hencke, who has worked at the paper for 33 years, and senior correspondent Duncan Campbell, who leaves after 22 years.

Also going are senior reporter Audrey Gillan, personal finance writer Tony Levene, work section editor Ian Wylie, investigative reporter David Pallister and TV critic Gareth McLean.

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Guardian correction: Paul Dacre is not a theatre director

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 09:33
Tags: Journalism

The Guardian has corrected a piece which accidentally said that the editor of the Daily Mail had directed a new play about Martin Luther King.

“The Mountaintop was directed by James Dacre, not Paul Dacre, as we said in a theatre review (18 June, page 38),” the paper’s corrections column said today.

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Head of Emap’s data division leaves company

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 09:28
Tags: B2B Magazines, Magazines

The co-chief executive of Emap’s data and insight division, Neil Bradford, has left the publisher to “pursue interests in the private equity industry”.

His responsibilities have been taken on by Emap group chief exec David Gilbertson, who according to the Independent is “reviewing the role and whether to appoint a replacement”.

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Culture secretary buys Attitude magazine on expenses

Posted by Paul McNally on 19 June 2009 at 09:16
Tags: Journalism

He’s new to the job, but Press Gazette has learned a fair amount about culture secretary Ben Bradshaw’s media consumption from his 2007/08 expenses claims, which were published yesterday.

Last year, Bradshaw regularly dipped into the FT, Guardian, Times, Mail on Sunday, Telegraph, Observer, News of the World, Sunday Times, Independent, Daily Mail, Daily Mirror and The Sun.

He also reads the New Statesman, Prospect, The Economist and the Western Morning News on his frequent trips on First Great Western trains from London to his constituency in Exeter.

Bradshaw also claimed back the £3.25 cover price for two issues of Attitude, the monthly gay lifestyle magazine.

The expenses also reveal that he was a bit late paying his TV licence one year - and his staff seem to have had trouble getting to grips with the digital TV switchover.

Engineers were called out on 21 January 2008 because “staff were unable to get the Freeview box to work with combination unit”.

The bill says: “It was explained that there would be a call-out charge if the fault was unconnected to the repair, also they were asked to double check the scart was connected correctly.

“However they felt a call was necessary and we sent a engineer along, unfortunately they were trying to connect the scart the wrong way around.”

The simple error cost Bradshaw, and the taxpayer, a £20 call-out charge plus VAT.

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Kelvin Mackenzie could sue over Digital Britain proposal

Posted by Paul McNally on 18 June 2009 at 12:26
Tags: Broadcast, Radio

Former Sun editor Kelvin Mackenzie is considering legal action over a proposal in the Digital Britain to automatically renew the licences for the country’s three national commercial radio licences.

Mackenzie, a former owner of TalkSport, has expressed an interest in bidding for one of the licences when they come up for renewal in 2011/2012.

But Stephen Carter’s report on Tuesday said TalkSport, Classic FM and Absolute Radio could benefit from having their licences extended by up to seven years.

Mackenzie told the Telegraph: “The bottom line is there would be a queue a mile long to bid for these three national licences and interested parties would pay millions for them which would go straight to the Exchequer.

“The government needs money and people like me are willing pay a lot for one of these national licences which are up for renewal very soon.

“If the government presses ahead with this, I will take legal action and go to the high court.

“There is nothing in the current broadcasting act which allows the automatic roll-over of these licences.”

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Jamie Oliver magazine to be stocked in supermarkets

Posted by Paul McNally on 18 June 2009 at 11:22
Tags: Consumer Magazines, Magazines

Jamie Oliver’s bimonthly food magazine is doubling its print run to 260,000 and will now be stocked in Asda, Tesco, Waitrose, Sainsburys and Somerfield.

The title, which has four editorial staff, launched six months ago in WHSmith only and is due to publish its debut ABC figure in August, the Guardian says.

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CN Group sells more than half of its local radio stations

Posted by Paul McNally on 18 June 2009 at 11:14
Tags: Broadcast, Radio

Carlisle-based independent regional newspaper publisher CN Group has announced it is disposing of its network of five local radio stations in the Midlands, called Touch Radio.

The buyer, Steve Orchard, is a commercial radio veteran who spent 25 years at GWR and then GCap Media before stepping down last year.

It marks a return to the industry for him - and means CN Group now only owns three radio stations: The Bay in Lancaster, Lakeland Radio in Kendal and Citybeat in Belfast.

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Digital Britain: C4/BBCW link ‘not a forced marriage’

Posted by Paul McNally on 16 June 2009 at 17:16
Tags: Journalism

The government has given its blessing to a partnership between Channel 4 and BBC Worldwide, but has said it will not be a “forced marriage”.

In the final Digital Britain report, published this afternoon, communications minister Stephen Carter said the government would help get the joint venture off the ground - but it was up to both parties to agree terms that suited them.

A deal between C4 and the BBC could not be reached in time for today’s report, but C4 chief executive Andy Duncan said in a statement that the broadcaster had made “considerable progress” in its negotiations.

C4 chairman Luke Johnson added: “We welcome the Government’s explicit rejection of a partial privatisation of Channel 4 through a forced commercial merger and the encouragement Digital Britain gives to our discussions about partnership with BBC Worldwide.

“This remains our preferred means of securing more sustainable funding to support our public service delivery and we look forward to confirming with BBC Worldwide in the near future the proposed terms of our partnership.”

Carter told journalists today: “This is not a forced marriage. It the board of the BBC and the board of Channel 4 want it, the government will facilitate it.”

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Anthony Barnes returns to PA as showbiz editor

Posted by Paul McNally on 16 June 2009 at 11:33
Tags: Journalism

Former Q online editor Anthony Barnes and Independent on Sunday media correspondent is the new Press Association head of showbiz.

Barnes previously worked as a PA reporter for seven years. In his new job, he will oversee the agency’s showbiz team in print and online.

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Two Al Jazeera producers detained in Afghanistan

Posted by Paul McNally on 16 June 2009 at 11:30
Tags: Broadcast, Television

Al Jazeera has called for the immediate release of two producers detained in Afghanistan, according to the Guardian.

Qais Azimy was told to report to the country’s intelligence headquarters on Sunday for an interview. Hameedullah Shah was picked up from the Al Jazeera bureau by two officers.

They have not been heard from since.

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Gordon Brown: We can’t allow a monopoly in local news

Posted by Paul McNally on 16 June 2009 at 07:44
Tags: Broadcast, Regional Newspapers, Television

Today’s Digital Britain report will help “develop and sustain” a thriving regional news landscape, prime minister Gordon Brown said today.

Writing in the Times ahead of the publication of Lord Carter’s report at about 3.30pm, Brown said: “We must develop and sustain public service content, such as commercial regional news, which we all value and rely on, ensuring that it can be delivered across multiple digital outlets by a range of providers accessible to all.

“These are difficult times for local newspapers, TV and radio and, as Ofcom has said, a regionalised TV news network is no longer financially viable.

“However, competition in news - as in business - is vital to provide consumers with the highest quality and we cannot allow a monopoly to take root.

“Remaining in touch with local issues and holding councils and regional bodies to account is the lifeblood of our democracy.”

PressGazette.co.uk will have full coverage of the Digital Britain report, and your reaction to it, later this afternoon.

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