2005-2014

9 June 2005

Significant rise in reach of the press

The National Readership Survey 2005 has revealed a significant increase in the reach of the press (dailies and magazines) over the last three years with an addition of 21 million readers between 2002 and 2005. It has also found that the number of readers of newspapers and magazines in rural India is now almost equal to those in urban India. In one of the largest surveys of its kind in the world...

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8 June 2005

Many newspapers never permit use of anonymous sources

NEW YORK (AP) – Editors at about one in four newspapers who responded to a survey say they never allow reporters to quote anonymous sources, and most others have policies designed to limit the practice. One editor said his paper's rules are so strict they would have disqualified Deep Throat as a source. The use of anonymous sources – people who give reporters information only on condition that...

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7 June 2005

When Web print stories disappear, the meaning of 'archives' fades

"So let us drudge on about our inescapably impossible task of providing every week a first rough draft of a history that will never be completed about a world we can never understand." -- Philip Graham, publisher of the Washington Post, 1946-63 If Graham thought it was impossible to do a first draft of history in the newspaper, imagine how much more impossible he would consider our present time...

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6 June 2005

Times, HT join hands in Mumbai

Competition can make strange bedfellows. The Times of India and Hindustan Times, bitter rivals in the national capital, have joined hands in Mumbai to take on DNA, the daily expected to be launched by the Essel Group-Dainik Bhaskar combine, in July. The collaboration between two of the country’s biggest media empires – Bennett, Coleman and Co Ltd (publishers of The Times) and Hindustan Times Ltd –...

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4 June 2005

Rumsfeld blames Aljazeera over Iraq

US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has alleged that Aljazeera is encouraging armed Islamist groups by broadcasting beheadings of foreign hostages in Iraq. Speaking at a security conference in Singapore on Saturday, Rumsfeld said that "if anyone lived in the Middle East and watched a network like the Aljazeera day after day after day, even if he was an American, he would start waking up and...

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4 June 2005

Editors call for media regulation

Hyderabad, June 1 : Speakers at a national round table Wednesday agreed on the need for regulation of the media but differed on who should draw the line. Top journalists and Minister for Information and Broadcasting S. Jaipal Reddy felt there should be regulation for media, especially the electronic media, in view of the maddening competition but differed on who should make such the regulation...

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4 June 2005

Media is the massage in Mumbai

With the launch of 'Mumbai Mirror', a tabloid from the stable of Benett Coleman and Co, on May 30, the first salvo has been fired in the impending media war in Mumbai. The city is also awaiting two more confirmed launches – that of the Mumbai edition of the Hindustan Times and Zee-Bhaskar group’s DNA in the next couple of months. A Kolkata-based newspaper group too is eyeing the Mumbai market with...

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4 June 2005

Times Group to launch BBC auto magazine Top Gear soon

The Times of India Group is renewing its focus on magazines and is in the process of bringing various international titles to the country. One of the first to enter the market would be ‘Top Gear’ from the BBC stable. Gautam Sen is the editor of the magazine. Top Gear is expected to be published from India by the end of this month or early July. On being contacted, Times officials neither confirmed...

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3 June 2005

Pornographic dailies of India

If there is an increase in rape cases don't blame the police. Blame the media. The Times of India seems to be under heavy pressure. In the weeks to come it will have to face stiff competition from at least two other publishing houses and it is preparing itself to face it. Almost daily, as it were, it is announcing launch of new sections, like Times International, Times City and two full Sunday...

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3 June 2005

Sudoku mania reaches India

Several dailies make space for Japanese number puzzle. A number puzzle that has stormed its way into major newspapers, magazines and websites across the US, UK and most of the world, has disembarked on Indian shores via a slew of dailies, including The Hindu, Hindustan Times, Deccan Chronicle and The Asian Age. Originating in Japan in its current form, Sudoku consists of a 9x9 grid, further...

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