2005-2014

2 February 2005

Dainik Jagran to launch Channel 7 by early March

Dainik Jagran's television venture has got a go-ahead from the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. The news channel has been branded as Channel 7 and the test run would start from February 21. The channel will be formally launched by the first week of March. When asked why the channel was not named after the Jagran group, Siddharth Gupta, director - Jagran TV, says, "We intend to create a...

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2 February 2005

Penn Media to Convert 50 E-Zines to Blogs

Penn Media announced today that it will publish fifty of its flagship owned and operated e-zines as Blogs, making them one of the largest publishers of consumer trade blogs in the blogosphere. Pheedo Incis providing the consulting services for the rollout and the providision RSS and Weblog advertising services. The blogs are scheduled to roll out over the next three months. Penn Media President...

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1 February 2005

Under Fire

Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper's 6-year-old son doesn't read the New York Times or watch C-SPAN, so as Christmas approached he remained blissfully ignorant that his father faced up to 18 months in jail for refusing to reveal his confidential sources. While a three-judge federal appeals court panel in Washington weighed whether the First Amendment and legal precedent bestow a "reporter's...

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1 February 2005

Darfur: Déjà Vu

Emily Wax didn't hesitate when a rebel leader offered her a lift in a stolen Land Cruiser crammed with grenades, automatic weapons and mortar shells. Three sharpshooters, perched on the roof, scanned the desolate desert landscape as they moved toward the death zones. Her relentless lobbying with the Sudanese Liberation Army had paid off. To get to the rebel encampment and waiting escort, the...

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1 February 2005

US journalists fare well on test of ethics, study finds

Recent opinion polls show declining respect for the news media and a growing belief among many Americans that reporters have little regard for ethics. High-profile journalism scandals involving ethical lapses at CBS News, The New York Times, USA TODAY and other media outlets have fed the public's distrust of reporters. Just this week, a survey of 112,000 high school students found that 36% say...

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1 February 2005

Pay or free? Newspaper archives not ready for open Web... yet

Information wants to be free -- as long as you don't have to pay the people who dug up that information. While the Net has long been associated with free things -- free e-mail, free personal Web pages, free searches -- the news business has been repulsed by the notion that their hard-won scoops and journalism should be given away for free. But the newspaper business has had little choice but to...

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1 February 2005

Attack At The Source

In November 1969 Paul Branzburg, a twenty-eight-year-old reporter with the Louisville Courier-Journal, spent a few days hanging out with two local men for a story about how they planned to clear $5,000 making and selling a batch of hashish. The resulting article, THE HASH THEY MAKE ISN'T TO EAT, ran in the paper’s November 15 edition. In it Branzburg, a graduate of Harvard Law School and Columbia...

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1 February 2005

On Mission

This is the month that Michael Powell, chairman of the FCC, limps off into the sunset, leaving behind a lot of large, disappointed media companies. It’s not how the movie was supposed to end. Back in June 2003 Powell proposed loosening the rules of ownership so that big media could get even bigger, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit sent him back to the drawing board. Then, this...

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1 February 2005

Magnificent Obsession

Jonathan Harr, the author of A Civil Action, spent eight harrowing years plowing through a stack of legal documents as high as a three-story building, and nearly went broke in the process. Posing what he calls "the dumbest questions in the world," Richard Ben Cramer conducted more than 1,000 interviews to research What It Takes: The Way to the White House. For Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble...

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1 February 2005

Ad-monishment at Forbes.com

Before the management at Forbes.com decided last July to insert paid advertisements into the very text of stories, there were no meetings with the entire editorial staff to discuss the change, and not everyone even knew that the ad scheme, called IntelliTXT, was going to begin. "We were not forewarned," says one journalist, who asked to remain anonymous and claims to have learned of the ads from...

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