2005-2014

27 October 2005

Google May Try TV Ad Sales; 'Dream On,' Say Media Buyers

October 27, 2005 -- Google, the company that dominates online advertising, would like to try its hand at buying and selling television ad time. Google, already dabbling in print ads, recently confirmed that it's "mulling" ways to extend its ad-brokering system to television spots as well. If Google succeeds, it would mark a major turning point for an industry that has rebuffed other attempts at...

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26 October 2005

Afghanistan: Harassment of journalists likely to increase

The recent jailing of an Afghan magazine editor is raising concerns about the issue of press freedom in Afghanistan. Ali Mohaqiq Nasab, editor of the "Women’s Rights" monthly, was found guilty of publishing articles that were deemed un-Islamic. On 22 October, he was sentenced to two years in prison. The United Nations, the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, and several international...

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26 October 2005

IWMF awards given away to three women journalists

A war photographer from Germany, a crime reporter from Bangladesh who was stabbed and beaten, and the founder of a magazine threatened with closure by Iran's government because of its coverage of women's rights all received Courage in Journalism Awards from the International Women's Media Foundation (IWMF). Sumi Khan The foundation's 15th annual awards were presented Tuesday to Anja Niedringhaus...

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26 October 2005

CBS News Taps New Chief

(CBS) CBS News President Andrew Heyward announced Wednesday he would be leaving his post when his contract expires at the end of the year. Heyward will be replaced by CBS Sports President Sean McManus. "After nearly ten years in this job … it's time for a change, both for the news division and for me," Heyward wrote in an e-mail to CBS News staff. Heyward is the second-longest serving CBS News...

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26 October 2005

Stop The Presses: Newspapers Can't Even Give It Away

ONE OF THE NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY'S newest and most intriguing strategies for stemming the erosion of readers--the distribution of free metropolitan dailies--apparently isn't having much, if any, impact. That's the conclusion of a comprehensive study of free daily launches in four major U.S. markets that is being presented at a major industry readership symposium today. The paper, a collaboration of...

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26 October 2005

WSJ.com Goes Free to Lure Subscribers

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- As ink-and-paper publishers continue to struggle over how to maximize the Internet, The Wall Street Journal’s paid-access Web site is preparing another free "open house." The weeklong promotion is meant to attract new subscribers as well as lure advertisers into buying a day of dominance there -- for six-figure fees. Web experiments The promotion is approaching toward the...

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26 October 2005

BBC to take on Aljazeera on latter's own turf

British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has announced plans for its biggest transformation in 70 years – it is closing down 10 of its foreign language radio services to pay for an Arabic channel that will be launched in 2007. The move comes amid a mad scramble for the Middle East television market. GRIM FACADE: The World Service provides news in English and 42 other languages (including the 10...

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26 October 2005

Newspapers in Katrina disaster forge new bonds with readers

SAN JOSE, Calif. - The journalists who survived Hurricane Katrina and managed to keep publishing from the disaster zone have a new appreciation for their readers as well as the media's crucial role in debunking rumors, several editors said Wednesday. Many reporters lost their homes in the huge storm and have been separated from their families, but are sustained by how appreciative readers are to...

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25 October 2005

A Fake End to Fake News

"Myself and others felt violated by the first bill," said Doug Simon, the founder, president and CEO of D S Simon Productions, a major producer of the faux television news reports known as video news releases (VNRs). Simon was referring to the Truth in Broadcasting Act (S 967). In its original incarnation, this bill would have required a "conspicuous" disclosure to accompany any government...

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25 October 2005

Global ad spending expected to rise to $406bn

India is among the four emerging markets that have been forecast to report booming growth in advertising spend, supplying 27 per cent of world ad growth this year. The buoyant ad marketing in emerging economies will raise global adspend forecast for 2005 to $406 billion, a rise of 5.2 per cent over 2004, leading global media agency Zenith Optimedia has said. DOWNPOUR: The buoyant ad marketing in...

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