News

19 March 2007

So how did the US media lose its way?

During 1963 and 1974 the big American media (agencies, television networks and newspapers) enjoyed a high international reputation for their critical coverage of Presidents Johnson and Nixon over Vietnam and Watergate. However, after 1974, the US media broadly reverted to their old cold war loyalty to the foreign policies of each incumbent President. Over a lengthy period (1951 onwards) The New...

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18 March 2007

Magazine publishers see future, but no profit, in shift to Internet

HANNOVER: In 1980, the aspiring global media baron Rupert Murdoch turned to the president of his U.S. newspaper operations, Donald Kummerfeld, and, as he was wont to do, made a bold prediction. "Someday, Don," Murdoch said, according to Kummerfeld, "all news — and advertising — will be delivered digitally. There will really be no need for paper and ink." More than a quarter of a century later, the...

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17 March 2007

Jawans assault journalists covering Manipur protest rally over rape

Assam Rifles jawans assaulted journalists and detained them at a security post for two hours on Wednesday for covering protest rallies over the alleged rape of an 18-year-old girl by a personnel of the post. The journalists were asked to erase all the photographs which captured the “excesses” of the AR personnel, the Imphal Free Press reported. Representatives of the All-Manipur Working...

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16 March 2007

Tribunal fines Croatian journalist

The international criminal tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in the Hague has dismissed the appeal of a Croatian journalist and found him guilty of contempt for revealing closed transcripts and part of a witness statement. The former editor-in-chief of Croatian daily Slobodna Dalmacija, Josip Jovic, has been ordered to pay a fine of €20,000 (£13,720) within the next 30 days, news agency Hina...

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16 March 2007

Gory statistics: Attacks on journalists in Iraq

A total of 97 journalists and 37 media support staffers have been killed in the line of duty since the war began on March 20, 2003. The media death toll in Iraq has steadily climbed since 2003, when 14 journalists — most of them reporters working for the international press— were killed. In 2004, 24 journalists were killed, followed by 23 deaths in 2005, and 32 deaths in 2006. The 32 deaths in...

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16 March 2007

On 4th anniversary of Iraq conflict, press marks deadliest toll: CPJ

Four years after the US-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein, Iraq remains the deadliest country in the world for the press as local journalists continue to suffer disproportionately from the violence, research by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) shows. The bodies of correspondent Atwar Bahjat (inset), cameraman al-Falahi, and engineer Khairallah were found near Samarra, a day after the...

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15 March 2007

Pro-am journalism takes off with launch of Assignment Zero

NYU professor Jay Rosen’s NewAssignment.net and Wired News have launched an attempt to bring together professional writers and editors with citizen journalists to collaborate on reporting and writing about the rise of crowdsourcing on the Web. Inspired by the open source movement, the goal of Assignment Zero, as the project is called, is to develop a working model of an open newsroom. “An...

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15 March 2007

Stop the presses, boys! Women claim space on op-ed pages

Whatever other reasons may explain the lack of women’s voices on the nation’s op-ed pages, the lack of women asking to be there is clearly part of the problem. Many opinion page editors at major newspapers across the country say that 65 or 75 percent of unsolicited manuscripts, or more, come from men. The obvious solution, at least to Catherine Orenstein, an author, activist and occasional op-ed...

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15 March 2007

Inx Media to launch 12 channels, Vir Sanghvi to head news operations

Hindustan Times group Editorial Director Vir Sanghvi is joining the INX Media group that has planned a bouquet of news and entertainment channels in different languages. Sanghvi would be the chief executive of the new company and editorial head of the news channels, promoted by Indrani Mukerjea, the chairperson of the venture and the wife of former chief of STAR TV’s India operations Peter...

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15 March 2007

Klebnikov murder suspect skips court again, trial postponed

The second jury trial of two men in the July 2004 murder of Forbes Russia Editor Paul Klebnikov had to be postponed again Wednesday after one of the defendants went missing. It was the second time that Kazbek Dukuzov, who is 32 or 33, failed to turn up at the Moscow City Court. Dukuzov missed a February hearing. Musa Vakhaev, accused of murdering U.S. journalist Paul Klebnikov, speaks to...

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