2005-2014

25 June 2006

British media seek new readers on US shores

NEW YORK (Reuters) - When Americans talk about the British Invasion, they often mean the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. A new wave is on its way, but from Fleet Street. In the last month, several venerated British news operations, including the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC.UL: Quote, Profile, Research), The Times of London, the Guardian newspaper and the Economist magazine unveiled plans to...

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25 June 2006

Beware false prophets of the internet age

It's that man again: Sir Martin Sorrell, advertising mogul, media guru, the thinking man's Alan Sugar - or (as he would charmingly add) 'the poor man's Warren Buffett'. This time Sorrell is on his feet at a Newspaper Society conference designed to hymn the wonders of the local press, which he does in amiable if abbreviated fashion. But really he wants to talk 'legacy businesses' and 'verticals'...

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25 June 2006

TV chiefs turn Iraq war into drama

British broadcasters are making a series of fictionalised accounts of the Iraq war that will include a controversial Channel 4 dramatisation of soldiers abusing prisoners. Screenwriter Tony Marchant's new drama, The Mark of Cain, which began filming this month in Tunisia, draws on stories such as that of Fusilier Gary Bartlam, who was arrested in 2003 after trying to develop a roll of film that...

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24 June 2006

Knight Ridder's story is nearly over

Knight Ridder, the 32-year-old national newspaper company that publishes the Times and the San Jose Mercury News, will fade into history by the end of this week. Corporate chiefs plan to lock up a sale of all 32 Knight Ridder newspapers to McClatchy Co. for $4.5 billion on Tuesday. McClatchy will then unload 12 of them, including the Times and the Mercury News, to help finance the deal. Although...

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24 June 2006

Canada newspaper group speaks out against Senate report

The group representing several newspapers in Canada has strong concerns about any further moves toward the regulation of media ownership. The Canadian Newspaper Association was reacting to a Senate report released Wednesday that recommends increased scrutiny on some media deals. The Senate Committee on Transportation and Communications, under Senator Joan Fraser, spent three years studying the...

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24 June 2006

Newspapers are dying, but the news is thriving

That high-pitched squealing you hear in the background is the sound of the American newspaper shrinking. The Washington Post, the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, Newsday, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and scores of smaller papers have downsized their staffs in recent months. About 70 newsroom staffers and 100 non-newsroom employees are exiting the Post...

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24 June 2006

Killing of Swedish journalist was planned by a foreign enemy

Many demonstrators at Friday's rally were protesting alleged interference in Somali affairs by Ethiopia, the country's longtime enemy. The Islamic militia that has seized control of Somalia's capital said Saturday the killing of a Swedish journalist was planned by a foreign enemy that wants to shatter weeks of relative peace in this Horn of Africa nation. Martin Adler, 47, was killed instantly...

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24 June 2006

Journalist's killing scares media away from Pak tribal areas

PESHAWAR: Journalist Hayatullah Khan took a photo of something the government said was never there. Within days he disappeared without a trace, dragged off by masked men. Last week, six months after his abduction, his body was found dumped in North Waziristan, handcuffed and shot in the back. The tragic news has startled the nation, sparking protests, and the government ordered a judicial probe...

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24 June 2006

Somali militia offers to protect media

The Islamist militia now controlling the Somali capital says it will protect foreign media following the murder of Swedish journalist Martin Adler. Mr Adler, 47, was shot dead as he filmed a rally in Mogadishu on Friday. The chairman of Somalia's Union of Islamic Courts, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, sent condolences to Mr Adler's family and promised to track down the killer. The rally was in support of...

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24 June 2006

Somewhere between old media and the blogosphere

When Michael Kinsley started Slate in 1996 he had a vision of people printing it out to read. Little did he know that 10 years later the idea of printing out something online would be as old-fashioned as, well, paying to read news. Kinsley reckoned that he had a new business model. If you didn't have to pay production, paper or distribution costs, then the magazine would quickly become profitable...

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